Horace Freeland Judson

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Horace Freeland Judson


Born
in New York, New York, The United States
April 21, 1931

Died
May 06, 2011

Genre


Horace Freeland Judson is a historian of molecular biology and the author of several books, including The Eighth Day of Creation, a history of molecular biology, and The Great Betrayal: Fraud In Science, an examination of the deliberate manipulation of scientific data.

The Eighth Day of Creation is a monumental work. Arising out of Judson's acquaintance with Max Perutz in 1968 came the idea of a book about the discovery of the structures of cellular macromolecules. Following a discussion with Jacques Monod in 1969, Judson expanded his planned book to a general history of molecular biology. The result is based on interviews of over 100 scientists, cross-checked and re-interviewed over a period of seven years. The book was partially serialized
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Average rating: 4.48 · 469 ratings · 58 reviews · 15 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Eighth Day of Creation

4.56 avg rating — 421 ratings — published 1979
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The Great Betrayal: Fraud i...

3.74 avg rating — 31 ratings — published 2004 — 6 editions
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The Search for Solutions

3.85 avg rating — 13 ratings — published 1987 — 13 editions
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Heroin addiction in Britain...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 1975 — 4 editions
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Science in Crisis at the Mi...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 1999
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THE EIGHTH DAY OF CREATION:...

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Our Thumbprints in Our Clay...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2009
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科学と創造―科学者はどう考えるか

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The Baltimore Affair

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Anatomía del fraude científico

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Quotes by Horace Freeland Judson  (?)
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“From my right, along the polished wood, there arrived a little trolley train on wheels, in the shape of a silver swan, with three parts joined by swivels, and each part bearing a decanter. A card said that the port was Taylor 1955, the white was Raventhaler Herberg Riesling Spätlese Cabinet 1959, and the red was Corton Les Marechaudes 1962. Beyond Brenner sat a gray-haired woman, a computer mathematician from one of the women’s colleges. Brenner leaned towards her. “There will be no difficulty in computers’ being adapted to biology,” he said, with clenched teeth. “There will be Luddites. But they will be buried.”
Horace Freeland Judson, The Eighth Day of Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Biology

“The conclusion is inescapable: Crick in Cambridge and Brenner in Johannesburg were thinking well ahead of the biochemical pack. But then, about fifteen minutes later in that same discussion, Walter Sampson Vincent, an instructor in anatomy from the State University of New York at Syracuse, got up to report some experiments with the RNA of unfertilized egg cells of starfish. “Both Dr. Borsook and Dr. Zamecnik have suggested that there should be two RNA fractions in the cell, with differing characteristics,” Vincent said. He had found the same thing himself, and proceeded to tell how, at length. His biological specimens—starfish eggs—were unfamiliar; his methods were the well-known ones of Torbjörn Caspersson and Jean Brachet (he had spent a year with Brachet as a postdoc); and worse than that, late in such a meeting, when scientist after scientist has risen to talk about his experiments, however tenuously related to the chief topic, the audience gets numb and drifts away. Vincent’s data suggested, he said in conclusion, that the nucleus contained two classes of RNA, “one a soluble, metabolically very active, fraction, representing only a small portion of the total.” His last words were about that fraction: “One exciting implication of the active, or labile, form would be that it is involved in the transfer of nuclear ‘information’ to the synthetic centers of the cytoplasm.” This astonishing suggestion went unnoticed.”
Horace Freeland Judson, The Eighth Day of Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Biology

“Not long after his first meeting with Watson and Crick, Chargaff elected himself polemicist on behalf of all that has been left out—for the early discoverers, Friedrich Miescher and Oswald Avery; for the role of protein in the chromosome; for complexity and crowding in the cell; for humility and caution in the laboratory. “I am against the over-explanation of science, because I think it impedes the flow of scientific imagination and associations,” he said. “My main objection to molecular biology is that by its claim to be able to explain everything it actually hinders the free flow of scientific ideas. But there is not a scientist I have met who would share my opinion.”
Horace Freeland Judson, The Eighth Day of Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Biology

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