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Max Delbrück and the New Perception of Biology 1906-1981: A Centenary Celebration University of Salamanca October 9-10, 2006

W. Shropshire Jr., Editor

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Electronic Book (E-book Instructions)9781434314369 $ 4.95  
This Book is Available Paperback (6x9)9781434314345 $ 10.40  
This Book is Available Dust Jacket Hardcover (6x9)9781434314352 $ 15.40  
About the Book

Professor Max Delbrück was a charismatic scientist, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1969, who gathered around him numerous students, colleagues and friends to explore modern quantitative approaches to biology. This small book is a collection of personal reminiscences given at a Centennial Celebration of his birth at the University of Salamanca, Spain, in October 2006 by those who primarily joined Max in a search for understanding sensory transduction.  Included among the twenty-three chapters and three appendices are several chapters by persons unable to attend as well as some talks presented at other centenary celebrations for Max. In addition three of Max and Manny’s children shared memories of their family life and activities.

            The book was organized and edited by Walter Shropshire, Jr., at the invitation of the Salamanca organizing committee, to make these stories available to a wider audience, even though Max is well known and respected within both biology and physics research communities. It is hoped that these anecdotes and insights honoring the life and work of Max will be an inspiration to others as an example of how to enjoy the creative play of innovative and significant scientific research.

About the Author

 

            Professor Max Delbrück was a charismatic scientist, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1969, who gathered around him numerous students, colleagues and friends to explore modern quantitative approaches to biology. This small book is a collection of personal reminiscences given at a Centennial Celebration of his birth at the University of Salamanca, Spain, in October 2006 by those who primarily joined Max in a search for understanding sensory transduction.  Included among the twenty-three chapters and three appendices are several chapters by persons unable to attend as well as some talks presented at other centenary celebrations for Max. In addition three of Max and Manny’s children shared memories of their family life and activities.

            The book was organized and edited by Walter Shropshire, Jr., at the invitation of the Salamanca organizing committee, to make these stories available to a wider audience, even though Max is well known and respected within both biology and physics research communities. It is hoped that these anecdotes and insights honoring the life and work of Max will be an inspiration to others as an example of how to enjoy the creative play of innovative and significant scientific research.

 

 

 

 

Walter Shropshire, Jr. is a retired research physicist who worked at the Smithsonian Institution from 1954 to 1986. From 1986 to 2003 he served as an Ordained Elder of The United Methodist Church serving congregations in Maryland at Cabin John,   Lovely Lane, Baltimore and the Foundry United Methodist Church in Washington, D.C. Since retiring from active parish ministry in 2003 he teaches courses part-time in parish ministry and the dialogue between science and religion at The Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington, D.C.

            From 1957 to 1959 he was a post-doctoral research fellow in biophysics at the California Institute of Technology working with Max Delbrück.

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            Max Delbrück and the New Perception of Biology 1906-1981 – A Centenary Celebration University of Salamanca October 9th – 10th 2006. Edited by W. Shropshire, Jr. (AuthorHOUSE: Bloomington, Indiana 2007).  

 

 

            Professor Max Delbrück was a charismatic scientist, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1969, who gathered around him numerous students, colleagues and friends to explore modern quantitative approaches to biology. This small book is a collection of personal reminiscences given at a Centennial Celebration at the University of Salamanca, Spain, in October 2006 by those who primarily joined Max in a search for understanding sensory transduction.  Included among the twenty-three chapters and three appendices are several chapters by persons unable to attend as well as some talks presented at other centenary celebrations for Max. In addition three of Max and Manny’s children shared memories of their family life and activities.

            The book was organized and edited by Walter Shropshire, Jr., at the invitation of the Salamanca organizing committee, to make these stories available to a wider audience, even though Max is well known and respected within both biology and physics research communities. It is hoped that these anecdotes and insights honoring the life and work of Max will be an inspiration to others as an example of how to enjoy the creative play of innovative and significant scientific research.


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