Donna Dickenson
DNA at 60
LONDON – On April 25, 1953, Francis Crick and James Watson published a one-page paper that many believed would revolutionize biological rese…
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LONDON – On April 25, 1953, Francis Crick and James Watson published a one-page paper that many believed would revolutionize biological rese…
CLEVELAND – Depuis des milliers d'années, les humains utilisent la génétique pour contrôler l'évolution des plantes et des animaux. Il est d…
NEWARK, NJ – Plastics are everywhere. Whether used to store leftovers, keep hospital equipment sterile, or insulate a home, plastics are unm…
LONDON – What defines a modern human? The biological answer is simple: a member of the species Homo sapiens that is characterized by such fe…
LONDON – Fifty-one years ago, James Watson, Maurice Wilkins, and Francis Crick were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine for their discovery …
PALO ALTO – People everywhere are increasingly vulnerable to the use of what Nobel Prize-winning chemist Irving Langmuir dubbed “pathologica…
ATHENS, GEORGIA – In the waning weeks of the North American hurricane season – a time when a superstorm is not expected to cause widespread …
STANFORD – Last January, China’s environmental authorities barely averted the contamination of nearly three million people’s drinking water …
EXETER – Those who believe that a supernatural being created the universe have never posed an intellectual challenge to evolutionary theory.…
COLD SPRING HARBOR – Since the human genome was first sequenced in 2000, genome science has accelerated at a remarkable rate. Rapid advances…
Will cloning produce armies of Einsteins or reduce mankind to Aldous Huxley’s proletarian slaves? Are genetically modified seeds and animals a source of future plenty, or Frankenstein foods poised to haunt us? Will technology and the Internet make totalitarianism a fading memory or provide future tyrants with the means to end our privacy? Does science promise more equality or will it widen the gap between the world’s haves and have-nots? Where, indeed, is today’s scientific revolution heading?
Before scientific advances work their way into public policies, it is vital for the public to understand and explore their implications. Debate about science and technology – their ambitions and implications for daily life – is at the forefront of an intellectual conversation about the future of the world. But it is the rare scientist who can speak to a wide audience; it is even rarer for journalists to be able to capture the concepts and concerns of scientists.
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