In today's corporate world of huge government-funded grants and labs, many would like to forget that in Hitler-era Germany, more than half of all academic biologists joined the Nazi Party-a higher proportion than that of any other professional group-largely because of that party's support for genetics. The modern science of genetics may seem benign, but we often forget that it emerged out of a shameful past-eugenics-under the auspices of which over 100,000 individuals were compulsorily sterilized by the United States government, and in the service of which laboratories such as Cold Spring Harbor were created. But Genome also carries a deeper social message, which may explain why Ridley has critics he is a libertarian in a genome community that contains many statists. I gave a copy to an old classmate of mine, now an orthopaedic surgeon, and he loves it. This is the book to give to an intelligent person who knows something about life science, even if that knowledge is outdated or rudimentary, and who would enjoy accessing modern molecular biology without struggling through northern blots or X-ray diffractions. James Watson described this book as “a lucid and exhilarating romp through our human chromosomes,” and he is right.
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