Site Search
Recent Posts
- 10/28/24 THE METALS OF THE HEBREW BIBLE: GOLD AND SILVER
- 7/29/24 LESSONS FROM WALL FRAGMENTS AND A SCROLL
- 7/10/23 FUTURE TENTS: IF ONLY BALAAM COULD SEE ME NOW
- 5/8/23 WHAT THE TORAH AND TALMUD TEACH ABOUT CANCEL CULTURE
- 6/27/22 THE LAST CIVIL CONVERSATION ON ABORTION?
- 1/18/22 EXPLORING EINSTEIN AND KAPLAN, GOD AND SCIENCE
- 11/29/21 WHEN JEWS ARGUE IN THE SUPREME COURT ABOUT ABORTION
- 7/22/21 WHEN JUDAISM MEETS GLOBAL WARMING (PART 4/4)
- 7/12/21 WHEN JUDAISM MEETS GLOBAL WARMING (PARTS 1-3/4)
- 4/5/21 CONG. AGUDAT ACHIM EXPLORES “WHEN JUDAISM MEETS SCIENCE”
Most Viewed Content
Tags
Archives
Subscribe to receive new posts:
“a rare masterpiece”
– Rabbi Lawrence Hoffman, HUC
“careful research, passionate analysis, and good sense”
– Rabbi David Teutsch, RRC
“clear, engaging”
– Rabbi Geoffrey Mitelman, Sinai and Synapses
“a tremendous tome”
– Rabbi Wayne Dosick, SpiritTalk Live!
“an absolutely fascinating book”
– Rabbi Richard Address, Jewish Sacred Aging
“scholarly, judicious, and fair–minded . . . and very ‘readable’”
– Ronald W. Pies, MD
“a fresh way to explore Jewish topics . . . useful in teaching adults”
– Rabbi Gail Shuster–Bouskila
“A must read! . . . careful thought and such literary excellence”
– Rabbi Jack Riemer
Upcoming events
Posts Tagged ‘genes’
Jews, Genes and Genetics: A Look at Family, Haplotypes and Peoplehood
In the United States today, the freest and richest nation on the planet, a country characterized by opportunity and mobility, the reality is that most Jews are Jews, if at all, by choice. For some, that choice is relatively easy, a coincidence of birth, culture and acceptance. For others, the situation is more complicated, involving perhaps disaffection with the faith or circumstances into which one was born and raised or, conversely, an attraction to a set of beliefs or patterns of behavior newly encountered.
Regardless of one’s position, in the open and fluid society that is America, most adults are not forced to be Jewish, i.e., to engage in conduct commonly understood to be specifically Jewish, such as attending shul, keeping kosher, studying sacred texts or simply identifying as a Jew. Nor are they forced to believe in a particular collection of ideas or ideals, including whether God exists, or, if they think that God does, what attributes or aspects that God may or may not have. Certainly strong social pressures can operate on an individual to motivate him or her to behave or believe one way or another, but most individuals still retain the ability to choose whether to be Jewish.
There is, however, one matter that is not open to choice, much less dispute or revision, and that is one’s genetic structure. And here, as elsewhere, advances in science in the relatively recent past have allowed us to investigate, to probe, to attempt to provide science based perspectives, if not answers, to the most basic questions: “Who am I?” and “Where did I come from?”. read more