On the Beauty of Science


A Nobel Laureate Reflects on the Universe, God, and the Nature of Discovery

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By Herbert A. Hauptman, Edited by D. J. Grothe, As told by D. J. Grothe
Imprint: PROMETHEUS
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HARDBACK
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Pages:
235

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Herbert A. Hauptman (Buffalo, NY) is president of the Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute, research professor in the Department of Biophysical Sciences, and adjunct professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University at Buffalo. Besides the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Dr. Hauptman has received many other honors, including election to the National Academy of Sciences. He is the author of more than 170 publications.

My Youth as a Scientist; The Crystallographer's Challenge; The Importance of Independent Research; How God Hurts Science; X-ray Crystallography: A History of Ideas.

Reviews

"In an era when pop star Miley Cyrus can put out an autobiography at the grand age of 15, it's refreshing to read a memoir from someone who has a life worth recording. Herbert A. Hauptman is one of this area's living treasures. He won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1985 for his groundbreaking work in X-ray crystallography, research that helped pave the way in the development of powerful drugs. But the 91-year-old Hauptman, long affiliated with the medical research institute that bears his name, isn't widely known here. Hopefully Hauptman's new memoir will help him draw the recognition he deserves. At its best, Hauptman's memoir is a provocative account of his views on science as it relates to society, politics, education and religion. On the Beauty of Science is a sure-to-be-controversial call to arms, as Hauptman argues forcefully that science and religion are incompatible and that Americans must learn to think more critically about science and other issues. Hauptman's memoir is sure to inspire a passionate debate between believers and nonbelievers, and I'll bet that was his desire all along." --Buffalo News, Sunday, November 2, 2008

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