The world went a bit mad in the nineties that's what i my decision. because religions have always had food taboos right so uh... for various reasons maybe there's some practical reasons why you should mix these kinds of foods or whatever back in the day. Maybe it's also kind of a way of but the sanctity of the human body because it's also there is a sex to so there's something about sex and food in the body. The gm o denial is a more hesitancy that's more on the left than the right politically right there that kind of gm.
Shermer and Cobb discuss: objections to genetic engineering (political, religious, cultural) • selective breeding • recombinant DNA • the ethics of genetics • patenting life • gene therapy • gene editing • CRISPR • literature and films on the dangers of genetic engineering • bioweapons • 3 Laws of Behavior Genetics and what people fear about it.
Matthew Cobb is a professor in the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Manchester. He is the author of six books: The Idea of the Brain: A History; Life’s Greatest Secret: The Race to Crack the Genetic Code; Generation; The Resistance: The French Fight Against the Nazis; Eleven Days in August: The Liberation of Paris in 1944; and Smell: A Very Short Introduction. He lives in England.