Category: Uncategorized

  • Epigenetics: Between fundamental science and fantastic expectations

    Epigenetics: Between fundamental science and fantastic expectations

    One of my heroines in the field of epigenetics is Edith Heard. In this post I will tell you what I learned from her over the years with regard to epigenetic facts and fantasies. (For a good overview of facts and fantasies, watch this video at ‘Cracked Science’). Before I do that, you might want…

  • Scientists call for a moratorium on heritable genome editing. What do they want?

    Scientists call for a moratorium on heritable genome editing. What do they want?

    This is a guest post by Jim Dratwa and Barbara Prainsack. Jim Dratwa, Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, D.C., and Free University of Brussels’ Centre on Law, Science, Technology & Society. e: jim.dratwa@vub.ac.be Barbara Prainsack, Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, AT and Department of Global Health & Social Medicine, King’s College London, UK. e:…

  • CRISPR culture

    CRISPR culture

    CRISPR is a way of changing and replacing parts of DNA using enzymes like a pair of molecular scissors (of course things are more complex than this!). This new technology for ‘editing’ DNA, genes or genomes began to attract public attention between around 2012 and 2015. When I started to write about metaphors used to…

  • From epigenetic landscapes to epigenetic pancakes

    From epigenetic landscapes to epigenetic pancakes

    As somebody interested in metaphor, art and science, I was just starting to read Susan Merrill Squier’s book Epigenetic Landscapes: Drawings as metaphor (2017) (I am grateful to Cath Ennis for sending me this book), when Aleksandra Stelmach alerted me to a blog post entitled “Epigenetic Pancakes”. It was therefore inevitable that I should write…

  • The exposome – the what?

    The exposome – the what?

    I recently came across the term ‘exposome’ (roughly, the sum total of everything we are exposed to) and started to read up on it. But I just don’t know what to make of it… is it merely humbug or is there more to it? In this post I want to summarise a few milestones in…

  • Is STS trivial? Chris Toumey reflects on writing a book about nanotech and the humanities

    Is STS trivial? Chris Toumey reflects on writing a book about nanotech and the humanities

    This is a guest post by Chris Toumey, a cultural anthropologist who has observed and studied developments in nanotechnology for many years. Chris and I have known each other for a long time, and his work and words have always inspired me. He has just published a book entitled Nanotech and the Humanities: An Anthropologist…

  • Reimaging AMR – beyond the military metaphor

    Reimaging AMR – beyond the military metaphor

    Last week the UK government launched yet another ‘action plan‘ on dealing with the rise of antimicrobial resistance or better ‘drug resistant infections‘, that is infection that no longer respond to antibiotics because the bacteria that cause the infections have developed resistance to the drugs used to eliminate them……. This is a guest post by…

  • Public Understanding of Science – the 1960s

    Public Understanding of Science – the 1960s

    At the end of last year I wrote a blog post about a book in which Sheila Jasanoff asks ‘Can science makes sense of life’. She answers this question in a rather bleak and negative way. However, questions about the nature of science and the nature of life have stayed with me ever since, which…

  • Gene drive communication: Obstacles and opportunities

    Gene drive communication: Obstacles and opportunities

    The other day I was talking to two people about various developments in science. Both are interested in science, but they are not natural scientists. I mentioned ‘gene drives’. Their faces went blank. I then said: “it’s something like the gene editing of a whole population of creatures, such as insects, for example. This can…

  • Nature’s first article: Huxley on Goethe

    Nature’s first article: Huxley on Goethe

    I have blogged before about science popularisation during the 19th century and the role of periodicals in this process, as they “played a far greater role than books in shaping understanding of new discoveries and theories in science, technology and medicine”. My interest in popular science magazines was rekindled when I saw an announcement that…