Human Science
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Genome
Genome
The human genome is nothing less than an autobiography of our species. Spelled out in a billion three-letter words using the four-letter alphabet of DNA, the genome has been edited, abridged, altered and added to as it has been handed down, generation to generation, over more than three billion years. With the first draft of the human genome due to be published in 2000, we, this lucky generation, are the first beings who are able to read this extraordinary book and to gain hitherto unimaginable insights into what it means to be alive, to be human, to be conscious or to be ill.
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barnes & noble
The Knife Man
The Knife Man
In an era when bloodletting was considered a cure for everything from colds to smallpox, surgeon John Hunter was a medical innovator, an eccentric, and the person to whom anyone who has ever had surgery probably owes his or her life. In this sensational and macabre story, we meet the surgeon who counted not only luminaries Benjamin Franklin, Lord Byron, Adam Smith, and Thomas Gainsborough among his patients but also “resurrection men” among his close acquaintances. A captivating portrait of his ruthless devotion to uncovering the secrets of the human body, and the extraordinary lengths to which he went to do so—including body snatching, performing pioneering medical experiments, and infecting himself with venereal disease—this rich historical narrative at last acknowledges this fascinating man and the debt we owe him today.
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amazon
barnes & noble
Digging Up The Dead
Digging Up The Dead
"When I was four or five years old my mother took me to see a dead man." This riveting memory from the author’s own life is the start of a historical narrative and an evocation of a world where surgeons and body-snatchers colluded and conspired. It tells the story of Astley Cooper (1768–1841), a reckless young man who became a fiery radical and a brilliantly successful surgeon. He was a student of the famous John Hunter, the teacher of John Keats when the poet was a medical student, and the first person to describe the function of the middle ear. But Cooper’s real passion was dissection: he began with student raids on graveyards as well as on neighbors’ cats and dogs, and ended up running a country-wide network of informers and body snatchers. He would boast to a House of Commons inquiry that there was no man or woman in Britain whose body he could not obtain after their death. Beautifully written and brilliantly original with a touch of the gothic, this volume suggests that biography is a form of dissection, anatomizing, and autopsy.
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amazon
barnes & noble
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