Donna Dickenson
O ADN 60 Anos Depois
LONDRES – No dia 25 de Abril de 1953, Francis Crick e James Watson publicaram um trabalho de apenas uma página que, na opinião de muitas pes…
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LONDRES – No dia 25 de Abril de 1953, Francis Crick e James Watson publicaram um trabalho de apenas uma página que, na opinião de muitas pes…
CLEVELAND – Desde há milhares de anos que os seres humanos têm utilizado a engenharia genética para controlarem a evolução de plantas e de a…
NEWARK, NJ – Os plásticos estão em todo o lado. Quer sejam utilizados para guardarem sobras, manterem o equipamento hospitalar esterilizado …
LONDRES – O que define o Homem moderno? A resposta biológica é simples: membro da espécie Homo sapiens que se caracteriza por certas particu…
LONDRES – Há cinquenta e um anos atrás, James Watson, Maurice Wilkins e Francis Crick receberam o Prémio Nobel da Medicina pela descoberta d…
PALO ALTO – As pessoas em todo o mundo estão cada vez mais vulneráveis ao uso daquilo a que o químico vencedor do Prémio Nobel, Irving Lan…
ATHENS, GEORGIA – Nas últimas semanas da temporada Norte-Americana dos furacões – uma altura em que não se espera que uma supertempestade ca…
STANFORD – Foi por pouco que em Janeiro passado as autoridades ambientais evitaram a contaminação da água potável destinada ao consumo de ce…
EXETER - Aqueles que acreditam que um ser sobrenatural criou o universo nunca constituíram um desafio intelectual à teoria evolucionista. Ma…
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.
Project Syndicate brings cutting-edge science alive with a monthly series of commentaries that decipher esoteric ideas and “translate” them into a language that newspaper readers can understand. Science and Society provides the context in which today’s “eighth day of creation” can be comprehended and acted upon. Month after month, Science and Society captures the excitement of scientific discovery and brings to newspaper readers many of the great minds working at the cusp of scientific progress.
Contributors have included Nobel laureates Pierre-Gilles des Gennes, Paul Berg, and Leon Lederman; path breaking researchers such as physicist Anton Zeilinger, paleontologist Kevin Padian, medical sociologist Dorothy Nelkin, astronomer and physicist Eugene Parker, biologist Bruce Alberts, and UN expert on environmental catastrophes Arne Jernelov.
The series is edited by Joanna Rose, science writer for Forskning & Framsteg magazine and producer of Swedish Radio’s “Filosofiska Rummet” program.
Show moreProject Syndicate produces video interviews with regular and featured authors, conducted by the editors of Project Syndicate. In these lively interviews, Project Syndicate contributors expand upon their ideas and analyses, and on the events and trends that their commentaries address. These pithy, compelling discussions are the perfect way to enhance the impact of commentaries that you receive from Project Syndicate.
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