Carl Zimmer

She Has Her Mother's Laugh

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Award-winning, celebrated New York Times columnist and science writer Carl Zimmer presents a history of our understanding of heredity in this sweeping, resonating overview of a force that shaped human society—a force set to shape our future even more radically.
She Has Her Mother's Laugh presents a profoundly original perspective on what we pass along from generation to generation. Charles Darwin played a crucial part in turning heredity into a scientific question, and yet he failed spectacularly to answer it. The birth of genetics in the early 1900s seemed to do precisely that. Gradually, people translated their old notions about heredity into a language of genes. As the technology for studying genes became cheaper, millions of people ordered genetic tests to link themselves to missing parents, to distant ancestors, to ethnic identities. . . .
But, Zimmer writes, «Each of us carries an amalgam of fragments of DNA, stitched together from some of…
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Quotes

  • Tarlan Asadlihas quoted3 years ago
    The genetic nostalgia of the Nazis was so powerful that it even extended to other species. Hermann Göring, Hitler’s most powerful deputy, became a patron of a project to restore the wild ancestors of cattle. Known as aurochs, these giant animals had become extinct in the Middle Ages. Under Göring’s direction, zoologists searched Nazi-held countries for cows that seemed to retain a few vestigial features of aurochs. They bred the cattle, looking among the calves for the ones that appeared to step even further back in time.

    Göring’s goal was to release the restored aurochs in Poland, where they would roam one of the last primeval European forests. He pictured himself as a modern Siegfried from Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung, hunting the same noble beasts as his Aryan ancestors. To clear the path for his romantic vision, Göring emptied the Polish forests of Jews, Polish resistance fighters, and Soviet partisans.
  • Tarlan Asadlihas quoted3 years ago
    To test this idea, Doudna and her colleagues tried to cut out a piece of DNA from a jellyfish gene. (The gene is a common tool for molecular biologists, because it makes a glowing protein that can light up a cell like a microscopic jack-o’-lantern.)
  • Tarlan Asadlihas quoted3 years ago
    As unbroken lines of descent from noble ancestors became more important, leading families paid artists for visual propaganda.

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