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"History repeats itself, in part because the genome repeats itself. And the genome repeats itself, in part because history does."
This book forces you to ask important questions and appreciate the history and life of Science. I would say it is a must read for a student of Science.
This book forces you to ask important questions and appreciate the history and life of Science. I would say it is a must read for a student of Science.
challenging
informative
inspiring
reflective
slow-paced
Mukherjee did it again. An in-depth technical history that is immensely readable and instructive. This time about the gene. I expect to come back to this when I need to recall a subject area.
inspiring
mysterious
reflective
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informative
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The Gene: An Intimate History by Siddhartha Mukherjee is a free NetGalley ebook that I read in early May.
Beyond its circular Mondrian cover lies a textbook's worth of biological history and genetic theory from one of the most patient, yet inquisitive voices in non-fiction literature today. Mukherjee tells of the lives of Darwin, Paul Berg, Oswald "Fess" Avery, Mendel, and dozens of flash in the evolutional pan contributors to the human genome.
Beyond its circular Mondrian cover lies a textbook's worth of biological history and genetic theory from one of the most patient, yet inquisitive voices in non-fiction literature today. Mukherjee tells of the lives of Darwin, Paul Berg, Oswald "Fess" Avery, Mendel, and dozens of flash in the evolutional pan contributors to the human genome.
I loved the history section of this one. It presented the history of genetics in a way that acknowledged the unique genius of names we know while also discussing how racism, sexism, and other misconceptions and happenstance of the time impacted them.
This lead nicely into the much more ethics-focused second half. I think good, thoughtful, looks at history can give us such a good view of what we tend to do well and what we tend to do wrong. Getting out of the current moment makes the effects of confirmation bias and the current culture so easy to spot.
A few favorite tidbits:
-Mendel only did the fundamental genetics experiment with peas because he failed the biology teaching exam twice, and the monks thought using mice was too risque.
-Darwin was figuring out natural selection at about the same time: the two theories really completed each other but nobody really put it together, even when they presented at the same conference.
-Mendel's style was small-scale deliberate experimentation and Darwin's was large-scale intuitive theorizing. Both were extremely valuable and important.
-Men really did some mental gymnastics to feel more important than women. The first time sperm was seen under a microscope, it was thought to be an entire tiny 'homunculus.' This theory claimed that men carried all inheritable information and women were basically just ovens. The funny thing about this theory, is that it was miniature people all the way down.
This lead nicely into the much more ethics-focused second half. I think good, thoughtful, looks at history can give us such a good view of what we tend to do well and what we tend to do wrong. Getting out of the current moment makes the effects of confirmation bias and the current culture so easy to spot.
A few favorite tidbits:
-Mendel only did the fundamental genetics experiment with peas because he failed the biology teaching exam twice, and the monks thought using mice was too risque.
-Darwin was figuring out natural selection at about the same time: the two theories really completed each other but nobody really put it together, even when they presented at the same conference.
-Mendel's style was small-scale deliberate experimentation and Darwin's was large-scale intuitive theorizing. Both were extremely valuable and important.
-Men really did some mental gymnastics to feel more important than women. The first time sperm was seen under a microscope, it was thought to be an entire tiny 'homunculus.' This theory claimed that men carried all inheritable information and women were basically just ovens. The funny thing about this theory, is that it was miniature people all the way down.
As someone without any background in genetics, I found this book well-written, very informing and overall fascinating! At points, the scientific material can be hard to get your head around, but the author manages to keep you hooked to the book. Definitely worth the time and effort!
challenging
informative
slow-paced
challenging
funny
hopeful
informative
inspiring
reflective
sad
tense
slow-paced