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A Whig History of CRISPR

genotopia.scienceblog.com

28 points by perugolate 10 years ago · 7 comments

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kmonad 10 years ago

Interesting analysis from my perspective as definitely not a good writer. One comment though:

"But science is no longer done in monasteries. Competition, pride, ego, greed, and politics play all too great a role in determining who gets credit, who wins the prizes, and who gets into the textbooks."

This really was never any different.

  • Torgo 10 years ago

    Science was done in the Royal Society, there certainly was no competition, pride, ego, greed or politics there!

    • nccomfort 10 years ago

      To be sure, there was. I had in mind, principally, the monastery in Brno, where a certain monk did some breeding experiments with peas in the mid-19th century. (I am the author of the article.)

peter303 10 years ago

Lander is still smarting from when private industry guy Venter from out of nowhere creamed the government human genome project an order of magnitude faster and cheaper.

Terr_ 10 years ago

In a way it's a shame how humans seem wired to want "The One Guy" to credit for any complex outcome requiring thousands of unsung incremental improvements.

Upvoter33 10 years ago

crispr is fascinating, as is this back-and-forth in the scientific community about its history

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