The balance of improbabilities : a scientific life
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The balance of improbabilities : a scientific life
Oxford University Press, 1987
Available at / 6 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Henry Harris, one of the world's most distinguished cell biologists, is the Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford. In this book he gives an engrossing account of what it is like to be an experimental scientist. After graduating in medicine in a still-colonial Australia, he went to Oxford, where, with one brief interlude, he has remained for the rest of his working life. There he has been engaged in an unremitting series of experiments, year in, year out, wrestling with the problems of the cell - problems that are the key to some of the most important questions in medical research. Professor Harris writes in a style that makes the process of scientific discovery readily comprehensible, and he captures with remarkable vividness the high tension of a scientist's inner life.
Table of Contents
- A schooling in Australia
- Sidere mens eadem mutato
- Interlude in a southern city
- The young Australian at Oxford
- On my own
- The USA
- The green world
- Return to Oxford
- Cell fusion
- Cancer
- The Queen's Professor.
by "Nielsen BookData"