The untold story of the woman who helped to make one of humanity's greatest discoveries -- DNA -- but who was never given credit for doing so. 'Our dark lady is leaving us next week.' On 7 March 1953 Maurice Wilkins of King's College, London, wrote to Francis Crick at the Cavendish laboratories in Cambridge to say that as soon as his obstructive female colleague was gone from King's, he, Crick, and James Watson, a young American working with Crick, could go full speed ahead with solving the structure of the DNA molecule that lies in every gene. Not long after, the pair whose names will be forever linked announced to the world that they had discovered the secret of life. But could Crick and Watson have done it without the 'dark lady'? In two years at King's, Franklin had made major contributions to the understanding of DNA. She established its existence in two forms, she worked out the position of the phosphorous atoms in its backbone. Most crucially, using X-ray techniques that may have contributed significantly to her later death from cancer at the tragically young age of thirty-seven, she had taken beautiful photographs of the patterns of DNA. This is the extraordinarily powerful story of Rosalind Franklin, told by one of our greatest biographers; the single-minded young scientist whose contribution to arguably the most significant discovery of all time went unrecognised, elbowed aside in the rush for glory, and who died too young to recover her claim to some of that reputation, a woman who was not the wife of anybody and who is a myth in the making. Like a medieval saint, Franklin looms larger as she recedes in time. She has become a feminist icon, the Sylvia Plath of molecular biology. This will be a full and balanced biography, that will examine Franklin's abruptness and tempestuousness, her loneliness and her relationships, the powerful family from which she sprang and the uniqueness of the work in which she was engaged. It is a vivid portrait, in sum, of a gifted young woman drawn against a background of women's education, Anglo-Jewry and the greatest scientific discovery of the century.
3 有用 TooChaos 2016-07-31 07:46:26
副标题暗示她落在DNA发现的后聚光灯的阴影里,十分确切。一个大奖可以引起人们对科学成就的关注,但在评价科学人的成就时,却难以在掌握基于微妙事实的公平。我是在另一领域的另一场荣誉之争中产生了阅读本书的欲望:科学的美妙之处就在于,她是会犯错,有道德瑕疵,不时被虚荣心诱惑,常常动摇的一切人性污点中开出的白莲花。这本书细致入微的揭示了聚光灯之外的科学中,美好人性与人性的枷锁。这值得所有人去阅读,尤其在这一... 副标题暗示她落在DNA发现的后聚光灯的阴影里,十分确切。一个大奖可以引起人们对科学成就的关注,但在评价科学人的成就时,却难以在掌握基于微妙事实的公平。我是在另一领域的另一场荣誉之争中产生了阅读本书的欲望:科学的美妙之处就在于,她是会犯错,有道德瑕疵,不时被虚荣心诱惑,常常动摇的一切人性污点中开出的白莲花。这本书细致入微的揭示了聚光灯之外的科学中,美好人性与人性的枷锁。这值得所有人去阅读,尤其在这一个科学与技术昌明,渗透到一切生活中的时代。而有志于科学的人,更可以因此去掉幻想,在这个叫人爱恨交织的行当中,端一颗平常心,变得更加坚韧。 (展开)
0 有用 何德西特 2023-12-10 01:46:55 广东
25小时,287处划线,标记读完的一瞬还是有好多感动和细节浮现,"feeling like i've just lost a friend",眼泪又硬生生被后记气回去 | 科学家、女性、犹太族,科学家永远top of the list | 情境性阳光开朗/阴暗暴躁,几乎可以说不爱她的只能是不了解她或者没能get the sunny version of her | 和38年短暂但不草率的人生相比死... 25小时,287处划线,标记读完的一瞬还是有好多感动和细节浮现,"feeling like i've just lost a friend",眼泪又硬生生被后记气回去 | 科学家、女性、犹太族,科学家永远top of the list | 情境性阳光开朗/阴暗暴躁,几乎可以说不爱她的只能是不了解她或者没能get the sunny version of her | 和38年短暂但不草率的人生相比死亡显得那么猝然草率,但也不忍心再多看到她痛苦又倔强的乐观 | 不是乞求同情的受害者,是开辟了自身和人类一番科学天地的创造者 | 第一次看传记,被资料的多面和具体程度惊到,就连对沃森的态度都能有起伏变化 (展开)
3 有用 dm 2010-01-24 01:00:00
看完double helix之后,我对DNA的故事产生了兴趣。又追着看了这本别人位rosalind franklin正名的传记。 franklin 是个extremely hardworking & well published (talking about Nature, Science here) 的科学家。 一心扑在科研上,个人生活非常平淡。最后年纪轻轻就癌症去世也可能是因为常年放射expo... 看完double helix之后,我对DNA的故事产生了兴趣。又追着看了这本别人位rosalind franklin正名的传记。 franklin 是个extremely hardworking & well published (talking about Nature, Science here) 的科学家。 一心扑在科研上,个人生活非常平淡。最后年纪轻轻就癌症去世也可能是因为常年放射expousre。可惜 watson的书把她形容成脑子不聪明,脾气古怪不合作,double helix一举成名,从此franklin这个反面形象就深入人心了。 (展开)