Cloning Opponent Denied Tenure at MIT
Dr. James Shirley, an adult stem cell scientist, has lost his appeal and will be denied tenure at MIT. Shirley, who is African-American, is charging racism. I can't comment about that, or whether Shirley's academic credentials would warrant tenure. But I can't help suspecting that his vocal opposition to all human cloning played a major part. You see, to oppose research cloning is deemed among the scientific intelligentsia and the adherents to philosophical scientism, to be "anti science."
We often hear scientists castigating the Catholic Church because of its stifling of Galileo all those years ago. The media often cluck-clucks about the Bush Administration's supposed suppression of scientific opinion on issues such as global warming. But there is mostly only silence about the intimidation mounted against scientists with heterodox views, who are threatened with denial of tenure, forced to teach "punishment" Freshman classes after years of teaching post graduates, not permitted to write book chapters, denied access to publishing in prestigious journals (one of the charges against Shirley is that he did not publish in the best journals), and otherwise discriminated against and marginalized for voicing minority views. This stifling of academic freedom is truly egregious--and it may be the unstated reason behind Shirley's ousting.


4 Comments:
I think being "forced to teach 'punishment' Freshman classes after years of teaching post graduates" was what David Prentice said happened to him. He started Do No Harm, www.stemcellresearch.org, and started organizing and speaking out on these things and boom, he's back to the starting line at his University.
Yes. That is precisely what happened to Prentice. He had his own lab, had been voted by the students with a prestigious teaching award, and then he took a year off to fight cloning. When he came back, his lab was taken from him, he was given 5 or 6 freshman classes to teach, each with 150 students. I know of others threatened with firing from prestigious teaching hospitals if they did not shut up about cloning (or Schiavo). I know of scientists who were going to testify before committees but had to back out at the last minute under threat of sanction. I know of scientists who have been shunned. Etc., etc., ad nausuem.
This is from January 2005. Any news on Sherley?
Oops. I linked the wrong story. He lost his appeal and is still denied tenure. Threatening a hunger strike, which is dumb. The right link is now working.
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