---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ahmad Samantho <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, May 14, 2009 at 2:31 PM
Subject: Fwd: Templeton Report: "Does evolution explain human nature?"
To: [email protected], [email protected]




---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Templeton Foundation <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, May 13, 2009 at 8:21 PM
Subject: Templeton Report: "Does evolution explain human nature?"
To: [email protected]


      [image: Templeton Report]  [image: News from the John Templeton
Foundation] May 13, 2009
    "Does evolution explain human nature?" [image: Frans de
Waal]<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=csc4h2vmqobswc4gf2ecp213eelho>

That is the Big Question answered by twelve distinguished scientists and
writers in the Templeton Foundation’s latest essay series, which has been
advertised this spring in publications across the U.S. and the UK.
Contributors include such leading evolutionary biologists as Francisco Ayala
(University of California, Irvine); Lynn Margulis (University of
Massachusetts, Amherst); Martin Nowak (Harvard); Joan Roughgarden
(Stanford); and David Sloan Wilson (University of Binghamton), as well as
Francis Collins, the former director of the Human Genome Project; Frans de
Waal, a psychologist and primate specialist at Emory; and Robert Wright,
author of *The Moral Animal: Why We Are the Way We Are*.

The essays are available online at
www.templeton.org/evolution<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=57egw4qtddckwf241sfxe5qt0p9z4>,
where they can also be requested in a free printed booklet. Advertorials
featuring the Big Question series have been appearing in the *Atlantic*, the
*Chronicle of Higher Education*, *Discover*, the *London Review of Books*, *New
Scientist*, the *New Yorker*, the *New York Times*, the *New York Review of
Books*, *Scientific American*, and *Seed*, as well as online at the *Guardian
*and the *New York Times*.
 [image: Martin
Nowak]<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=4i973ybnlc8r187i94sj05w2w3v49>

“For the bicentenary of Darwin’s birth,” explained Gary Rosen, the Templeton
Foundation’s chief external affairs officer, “we wanted to highlight the
breadth and sophistication of contemporary evolutionary theory. There are
disagreements among the essayists, of course, but all of them are wrestling
with very fundamental questions about what makes us human.”

As most of the essayists emphasize, recent advances in evolutionary biology
and psychology help to explain a wide range of human emotions, behaviors,
and capacities—and not just the stereotypically “selfish” ones. “The golden
rule of Jesus, Confucius, and others is that we should not do to others what
we would not want them to do to us,” writes Lynn Margulis. “Is this not a
clear precept for the evolutionary perpetuation of specific cohesive groups
in familiar habitats?” Frans de Waal stresses the continuity between human
beings and our nearest animal relatives: “I interact daily with chimpanzees
and bonobos, which are known as anthropoids precisely because of their
human-like characteristics. Like us, they strive for power, enjoy sex, want
security and affection, kill over territory, and value trust and
cooperation.”
 [image: Lynn 
Margulis]<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=i5km0czrf6juh2e45u8cl3rrulqt3>

For his part, Francisco Ayala sees important limits to evolutionary
explanations: “Science has nothing decisive to say about values, whether
economic, aesthetic, or moral; nothing to say about the meaning of life and
its purpose; and nothing to say about religious beliefs—except, of course,
in those cases when these values and activities transcend their proper scope
and make demonstrably false assertions about the natural world.” Martin
Nowak expresses similar doubts, but in a more philosophical vein: “Evolution
has led to a human brain that can gain access to a Platonic world of forms
and ideas. This world is eternal and not the product of evolution, but it
does affect human nature deeply. Therefore evolution cannot possibly explain
all aspects of human nature.”

The new essay series on evolution and human nature is the fifth “Templeton
conversation” on various Big Questions. The previous questions, which can be
found on the Foundation’s website at
www.templeton.org/bigquestions<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=fl4igk652o9toabwckegonnu44jkx>,
include: “Does the universe have a
purpose?<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=ipz7m39dao20h7snncimgnqdvlasu>”;
“Will money solve Africa’s development
problems?<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=93rnk7ara6l6ivu095hudo4b5pej4>”;
“Does science make belief in God
obsolete?<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=12xsusfx0jb5fghdtsb2ma6u18ld6>”;
and “Does the free market corrode moral
character?<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=d12y6wbsn3kpcv4o8cvb1eqz6nqas>
”

[image: Notebook]
Darwin in Istanbul [image: Turkish Press cover]  The Darwin anniversary
symposium in Istanbul, April 23-24, received widespread coverage in the
Turkish press.

In late April, Istanbul hosted its first-ever international scientific
meeting on the subject of evolution. Organized by the Faraday
Institute<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=4sd8924bdgfniqtcxzbls4slemkcb>of
the University of Cambridge, with funding from the Templeton
Foundation,
the gathering consisted of a two-day scholarly symposium and a public event
to mark the bicentenary of the birth of Charles Darwin and the 150th
anniversary of the publication of *On the Origin of Species*.

The symposium, which was attended mainly by biology faculty and graduate
students from Turkish universities, focused on new developments in
evolutionary biology and also the historical and present-day challenges of
teaching evolution in Turkey. Erksin Gulec of Ahi Evran University and David
Lordkipanidze of the Georgian National Museum surveyed recent hominid finds
in Turkey and Georgia, respectively. Other talks included Barbara Drossel of
Darmstadt University of Technology (Germany) on “The Evolution of Biological
Complexity,” Ard Louis of Oxford University on “The Evolution of
Self-Assembling Systems,” and Vidyanand Nanjundiah of the Indian Institute
of Sciences (Bangalore) on “The Evolution of Cooperation.”

Sukru Hanioglu, professor of Near East Studies at Princeton University, was
unable to attend the symposium but contributed a videotaped talk describing
how evolutionary theory was conveyed to Ottoman society in the 19th century
more as a philosophy than as a biological science. In fact, *On the Origin
of Species* was not translated into Turkish until 1971. The theologian
Huseyin Atay of Ankara University discussed the relationship between
evolution and the Qu’ran, arguing that Islam must embrace scientific truth.
And Sema Ergezen of Marmara University urged the inclusion of more
instruction on evolutionary theory in the scientific curriculum in Turkey.

The public event, which was attended by over 400 Turkish students, began
with a discussion of “Darwin the Man” by the Oxford historian of science
John Hedley Brooke and also included a performance of
*Re:Design<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=7wfxlfnb7ga1fxwza4rrggwgujpx0>
*, a play based on the correspondence between Darwin and the American
naturalist Asa Gray. The evening concluded with a panel discussion,
featuring four well-known biologists, and a Q&A session with the students,
all of which was recorded for broadcast on Turkish national television.

The conference received widespread coverage in the Turkish press, including
the mass-circulation daily newspaper *Hurriyet* and the Turkish edition of *
Newsweek*. A special website, in both Turkish and English, was created for
the conference at
www.Darwin200Istanbul.org<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=e2jarvmo55kq5ix1ndrnvr4qnlq1a>to
provide information about evolution and Darwin’s life.



To subscribe, click
here<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=hd47a5j8s2d0y1ref9k0mn1e8r74e>.
For more information, write to [email protected].
For a print version, click
here<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=7tmxh18vk8xo2yb3cmsva01y6jamz>.
For previous issues of the *Templeton Report*, click
here<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/?q=ulink&fn=Link&ssid=262&id=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&id2=38e6cfm94jqnvhuvaa8iq3spjku6y>.


[image: John Templeton Foundation]

This email was sent to [email protected] by the John Templeton
Foundation
300 Conshohocken State Road, Suite 500, West Conshohocken, PA 19428
Manage your email
preferences<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/actionpage/execute_page/?fn=Mail_ActionPage_FormResponse&tsid=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&page_type=management&sid=84zidt3xnqwt5efwvbfovmbr6aaqa&ssid=262>|
Unsubscribe
from the Templeton
Report<http://jtfadmin.bm23.com/public/actionpage/execute_page/?fn=Mail_ActionPage_FormResponse&tsid=dollqbc0yhzq8ssbf0nhyny8roy1f&page_type=unsubscribe&sid=84zidt3xnqwt5efwvbfovmbr6aaqa&ssid=262>

Kirim email ke