Elie A. Shneour


Elie Alexis Shneour was a French-born American neurochemist, biophysicist and author.

Early life

Shneour was born in France into a Jewish family, the son of Zalman Shneour and Salomea. His father, a known Yiddish and Hebrew poet and writer, emigrated from Czarist Russia in the early 1900s. His mother was from Belgium. Elie had one sibling, sister Renée Rebecca, who later became Spanish dancer Laura Toledo. She survives him.
After the Fall of France, Shneour and his family escaped to Spain at the insistence of his mother, while his father could not believe the impending catastrophe was actually happening. The family left Spain, and arrived at Ellis Island in New York in 1941. Shneour and his sister attended Cherry Lawn School in New York. Upon naturalization in 1944 and after graduation, Shneour joined the US Army and was deployed to western Europe to battle the Nazis.
Shneour attended undergraduate school at Bard College in New York, where he received his bachelor's degree in Biology in 1947. He then traveled to Berkeley, California, where he received his Masters in Biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1955. While at Berkeley, Shneour met and married his first wife, Joan Brewster. They had two children, Mark Zalman and Alan Brewster.

Career

Shneour received his PhD in Biochemistry from UCLA in 1958. He started his career as an American Heart Association research fellow. He became Research Associate at the Genetics Department at Stanford University, later moving to Associate Professorship of Biology and Neuroscience at the University of Utah, where he received the Distinguished Teacher award.
Shneour contributed to research for Manned Orbiting Missions program at the American Institute of Biological Sciences and NASA. Between 1969-1971, he continued as a Research Neurochemist at the City of Hope National Medical Center.
In 1971, Shneour moved to La Jolla, California with his family, where he served for two years as Director of Research for Calbiochem In 1975, Shneour formed an independent advisory company, Biosystems Associates, which he ran until his retirement in 2014.
Shneour served on a multitude of national and international scientific advisory bodies, and was a member of many notable scientific organizations in the fields of Chemistry, Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Neurochemistry.

Writing

Shneour authored a number of books and articles on scientific matters and political discourse. He was a fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry since 1996, and an editorial board member of Skeptic Magazine from 1992-2008. A Christ myth theorist, Dr. Shneour authored a glowing review of Michael Paulkovich's book ''No Meek Messiah”.
Addressing challenges and constraints faced by researchers, Shneour argued for a working consensus between scientists and bureaucracy in charge of funding, commenting that "It is not much of an exaggeration to suggest that had the present bureaucratic structure being in operation when poliomyelitis research was in its heyday, we might today have a compact, efficient, computer-operated portable iron lung rather than two vaccines."
Pondering CSICOP's role and objectives, Shneour reflected on the fact that "collectively we remain a series of small islands of rational thought in the vast ocean of scientific illiteracy." In CSICOP's 1998 feature article, he remarked that "skeptics should forego any thought of convincing the unconvinced that we hold the torch of truth illuminating the darkness. A more modest, realistic and achievable goal is to encourage the idea that one may be mistaken. Doubt is humbling and constructive; it leads to rational thought in weighing alternatives and fully reexamining options, and it opens unlimited vistas".

Selected works