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Sir Peter Medawar was not only a Nobel prize-winning immunologist
but also a wonderful writer about science and scientists. Described
by the Washington Post as a "genuinely brilliant popularizer" of
science, his essays are remarkable for their clarity and wit. This
entertaining selection presents the very best of his writing with a
new Foreword by Stephen Jay Gould, one of his greatest
admirers.
The wide range of subjects include Howard Florey and penicillin,
J. B.S. Haldane, whom he describes as a "with-knobs-on variant of
us all," and, in the title essay, scientific fraud involving
laboratory mice. There is Medawar's defence of James Watson against
the storm of criticism that greeted the publication of The Double
Helix. A merciless debunker of myths, he reveals the nonsense to be
discovered in psychoanalytic interpretations of Darwin's illness
and launches devastating attacks on Arthur Koestler, IQ
psychologists, and, most notably, Teilhard de Chardin. He raises
questions about the nature of scientific endeavour--he famously
defined science as the art of the soluble--and a common theme is
his desire to communicate the importance of science to the widest
possible audience.
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