We could ask for no wiser, more fascinating and talented writer to guide us into the future of our human heredity than Siddhartha Mukherjee. Through the rest of The Gene, Mukherjee clearly and skillfully illustrates how the science has grown so much more advanced and complicated since the 1920s-we are developing the capacity to directly manipulate the human genome-and how the ethical questions have also grown much more complicated. This is what can happen when we start tinkering with this most personal science and misunderstand the ethical implications of those tinkerings. Carrie Buck’s sterilization comes as a warning that informs the rest of the book. Mukherjee opens with a survey of how the gene first came to be conceptualized and understood, taking us through the thoughts of Aristotle, Darwin, Mendel, Thomas Morgan, and others he finishes the section with a look at the case of Carrie Buck (to whom the book is dedicated), who eventually was sterilized in 1927 in a famous American eugenics case. Here, he follows up with a biography of the gene-and The Gene is just as informative, wise, and well-written as that first book. 1 The book chronicles the history of the gene and genetic research, all the way from Aristotle to Crick, Watson and Franklin and then the 21st century scientists who mapped. An Amazon Best Book of May 2016: In 2010, Siddhartha Mukherjee was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his book The Emperor of All Maladies, a “biography” of cancer. The Gene: An Intimate History is a book written by Siddhartha Mukherjee, an Indian-born American physician and oncologist.
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