On Sat, 11 Dec 1999, Damien Broderick wrote:
> "...Among the metaphysical questions Cho and her colleagues want considered:
> Is it appropriate to define life in narrow, scientific terms, or is there
> a spiritual component to being alive? There is a "serious danger," the
> team warns, that the creation of new life forms will be "perceived by the
> public as proving that life is reducible to, or nothing more than, DNA."
>
> Ah me oh my. Where would we be without such deep-thinking worryworts?
> Just imagine the horror - one day, science might prove that vitalism
> isn't true! (The shock, the horror!) And we'd better put off any more of
> those blasphemous space probes, in case they smash into the crystal
> spheres, or run down one of the angels pushing the planets along.
The only way to deal with this is to differentiate "Mind" from "body". In that area, the December Scientific American has an interesting discussion on scientists unraveling both the "Movie in the mind" and the "Observer of the Movie" that seem to make up the essence of the "spirit" argument.
Robert