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Mark C. Biedebach received his PhD in Biophysics from UCLA in 1964.
(Prior to that, he was the 1st place national winner of the
American Institute of Electrical Engineers 1955 student paper
contest.) After two post-doctoral years (doing neurophysiological
research at Caltech and the College de France), he joined the
faculty of California State University, Long Beach, where he
conducted research and taught physiology and neuroscience for 34
years. Several years before retiring, he began preparing to write
in the area of human consciousness. Upon the advice of a friend, he
took several creative writing classes at University of California,
Irvine. Sitting in these classes, he realized that his readership
could be much larger if he were to write a fictional work into
which his knowledge of brain function and consciousness could be
interwoven. He decided to use his own memoir story (involving
finding Irina and marrying her in Russia) as a framework. He then
superimposed two fantasy characters to help an obsessed scientist
explore the mystery of consciousness. After a five-year incubation
period, "Clone and Kork" was born. It is the author's belief that
no similar work of fiction has ever been written (in which the
neuroscience of consciousness has been integrated into experimental
fiction, using fantasy characters.)
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