The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 36
Page 9
listen . A day or so later he would often realize that his theory did not work and
return to experiments , until boredom generated a new attack on theory . There
was much drama connected with these ideas . They did a great deal to liven up
the ...
listen . A day or so later he would often realize that his theory did not work and
return to experiments , until boredom generated a new attack on theory . There
was much drama connected with these ideas . They did a great deal to liven up
the ...
Page 10
quently visited other labs to see which new experiments had been done . Though
he was generally polite and considerate of colleagues who did not realize the
real meaning of their latest experiments , he would never hide this fact from them
.
quently visited other labs to see which new experiments had been done . Though
he was generally polite and considerate of colleagues who did not realize the
real meaning of their latest experiments , he would never hide this fact from them
.
Page 119
ing the recent experiments of the American phage workers . There was no need
to put together a speech . Several days before the meeting , Al Hershey had sent
me a long letter from Cold Spring Harbor summarizing the recently completed ...
ing the recent experiments of the American phage workers . There was no need
to put together a speech . Several days before the meeting , Al Hershey had sent
me a long letter from Cold Spring Harbor summarizing the recently completed ...
What people are saying - Write a review
User ratings
5 stars |
| ||
4 stars |
| ||
3 stars |
| ||
2 stars |
| ||
1 star |
|
LibraryThing Review
User Review - pramodghuge - LibraryThingA very personal account by the author James Watson on how he and his colleague Francis Crick with the help of others beat Linus Pauling to win the coveted Nobel prize for identifying the structure of ... Read full review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - ajlewis2 - LibraryThingI read about a third of it. I found the story wandered and wasn't clear. His treatment of Rosalind Franklin sounded like something written in the 1950s. It was at that point that I decided the book ... Read full review
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acid adenine answer argument arranged arrival asked atoms backbone base pairs bases became began biological Bragg building Cambridge Cavendish chemical chemistry coiled coils College completely conversation Crick crystallographic cytosine Delbrück double helix English equal evidence existed experiments face fact final Francis gave genes genetic give given groups guanine hand held helical hope idea immediately important interest John join King's knew later letter Linus London look lunch Maurice meeting mind molecules months Moreover morning moved Nature needed never obvious Pauling Pauling's Peter position possibility problem protein quickly realized reason remained Rosy saying scientific sense solve soon structure success sugar sure talk tell theory thinking thought thymine tion told walked wanted week write X-ray