F.D. Flam, Columnist

Competitive Culture Brings Out the Worst in Scientists

The Chinese “Crispr babies” researcher so badly wanted to be a pioneer that he ignored ethical boundaries. Others win a Nobel and think it’s a license to rant.

He Jiankui, the researcher condemned worldwide for unethical gene editing.

Photographer: Anthony Kwan/Bloomberg

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The researcher claiming to have created the first gene-edited babies might be afflicted with a form of ethical Dunning-Kruger syndrome — ignorance of one’s own ignorance. In interviews and a promotional YouTube video, He Jiankui telegraphed faith that his experiment will be remembered as a pioneering feat and a landmark in medical progress.

The field as a whole condemned this use of gene editing as unethical and criminally negligent. But even so, the episode should prompt scientists to take a good hard look in the mirror.