Reflections on the historiography of molecular biology.
نویسنده
چکیده
SURELY the time has come to stop applying the word revolution to the rise of new scientific research programmes. Our century has seen many upheavals in scientific ideas--so many and so varied that the notion of scientific revolution has been stretched out of shape and can no longer be made to cover the processes of change characteristic of most sciences these past hundred years. By general consent, two great research programmes arising in this century stand om from the others. The first, of course, was the one in physics that began at the turn of the century with quantum theory and relativity and ran through the working out, by about 1930, of quantum mechanics in its relativistic form. The transformation in physics appears to be thoroughly documented. Memoirs and biographies of the physicists have been written. Interviewswith survivors have been recorded and transcribed. The history has been told at every level of detail and difficulty. The second great programme is the one in biology that had its origins in the mid-1930s and that by 1970 had reached, if not a conclusion, a kind of cadence--a pause to regroup. This is the transformation that created molecular biology and latter-day biochemistry. The writing of its history has only recently started and is beset with problems. Accounting for the rise of molecular biology began with brief, partial, fugitive essays by participants. Biographies have been written of two, of the less understood figures in the science, who died even as the field was ripening, Oswald Avery and Rosalind Franklin; other scientists have wri:tten their memoirs. Various collections of historical reminiscences and personal tributes have been issued. Three histories have been published. The histories are The Path to the Double Helix, by Robert Olby; x ,4 Century of DNA, by Franklin H. Portugal and Jack S. Cohen; e and my own The Eighth Day of Creation. 3 The biographies and memoirs include The Double Helix, by James D. Watson; ~ Rosalind Franklin and DNA, by Anne Sayre; 5 The Professor, the Institute, and DNA, a life
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Minerva
دوره 18 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1980