
7 episodes

Choosing Science: Stories of Perseverance, Humanity, and Success Ana-Maria Zamfirescu
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- Science
Finding inspiration and a will to persevere might be challenging at times, especially when you have been prevented by outside forces, in a way or another, to achieve your goals. Although actions speak louder than words, stories of people that succeeded despite opposition can have the power to put wind into someones deflated sails and perhaps also fight against the impostor syndrome so many of us experience . Here I hope you will find such stories, which are mostly focused on scientific figures maybe less popular, but who greatly contributed to the development of science and in the process showed perseverance through obstacles. I will also highlight each individual's humanity, struggles and strength, and break the coldness that I feel exists between science/ scientists and the general public. Be prepared for sarcasm and a bit of fooling around sometimes, because what's life but empty without humour. Enjoy!
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Prof. Dr. Frits Zernike or how the Nazis did something good by mistake
Frits Zernike
Although he spent his whole life from birth to retirement in the cities of Amsterdam and then Groningen, his life was far from ordinary. Incredibly intelligent and gifted, having the rare combination of simultaneously being a fine theoretician and skilled experimentalist, Frits Zernike started his scientific journey in astronomy and then applied his findings in microscopy. Before his discovery was recognised and awarded a Nobel prize, the Nazis were the first to see the potential in Zernike’s achievement and popularized it, altough it was made public for more than a decade. This is the story of the man that made it possible to see what couldn’t be seen ever before.
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration -
Prof. Dr. Lynn Margulis or how to be so good you get to use swearwords in your scientific titles
Although now Lynn Margulis is as the historian Jan Sapp has said "as synonymous with symbiosis as Charles Darwin's is with evolution", she faced intense criticism in her lifetime. At the beginning her ideas elicited responses such as, "Your research is crap. Don't ever bother to apply again" and has been intitally rejected by 15 journals, in the end her passion and stubbornness prevailed. Strong in her opinions and unbothered by other people's vitriolic attitudes, she was also soft at heart and left a lasting mark on many lives. Lynn lived on one speed only, trailblazing and revolutionizing science and how modern scientist think about the basic biological unit of the eukaryotic cell and its origins. May we all have half of the fate she had in her ideas!
Resources:
https://www.sciencealert.com/10-inspiring-women-in-science
https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/discover-interview-lynn-margulis-says-shes-not-controversial-shes-right
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KlhW12dGfFk
https://www.thoughtco.com/about-lynn-margulis-1224847
https://www.nature.com/articles/480458a
https://www.edge.org/conversation/lynn_margulis-lynn-margulis-1938-2011-gaia-is-a-tough-bitch
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration -
Dr. Walle Nauta or how to stick it to the Nazis while revolutionising neuroscience
Dr. Walle Nauta was not only a brilliant neuroanatomist and scientist of the 20th century, but also a selfless, brave soul. He revolutionised research tools in neuroscience, making it possible to better understand one of the biggest mysteries of humankind, our brain. Exigent, but kind, intuitive, but rigorous, and most of all, humble, he lived a life to remember.
List of interesting people: John Boren, Joseph
Brady, Boyd Campbell, Sven Ebbesson, Ford Ebner,
Michael Fuortes, Robert Galambos, William Hodos, David
Hubel, Harvey Karten, JacSue Kehoe, John Mason, William
Mehler, James Petras, George Moushegian, Enrique Ramón-
Moliner, Felix Strumwasser, and Eliot Valenstein.
Resources:
Lecture- https://infinite.mit.edu/video/walle-j-h-nauta-gross-anatomy-human-brain%E2%80%9D-brain-dissection-course-mit-department-psychology
https://www.nap.edu/read/11807/chapter/16
http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/nauta-walle-j-h.pdf
https://righteous.yadvashem.org/?searchType=righteous_only&language=en&itemId=6748569&ind=NaN
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration -
Dr. Hilde Mangold or how to live your life on fast forward
The short but fruitful life of Hilde Mangold produced one of the few doctoral dissertation that has ever been directly linked to a Nobel prize.
Hilde performed transplantations of cells from one darker newt embryo (type of amphibian) into a receiver lighter embryo in order to see if the transplanted cells will trigger the formation of parallel body axis that can be distinguished between them by colour. After hundreds of such delicate and complex transplantations, she managed to obtain such animals, proving the fact that thise specific cells were behind the rearrangement and fate specification of the rest of the cells in the embryo. These cells were coined as the "Spemann-Mangold organizer" after Hilde and her supervisor. These were remarkable findings that changed the trajectory of the modern developmental biology. Eleven years later this discovery was awarded the Nobel prize. Unfortunately, Hilde did not get to see this day coming.
If you want to listen to the whole story of this gifted and determined woman, take a peak!
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
1. https://embryo.asu.edu/pages/hilde-mangold-1898-1924
2. https://www.jax.org/news-and-insights/jax-blog/2016/october/women-in-science-hilde-mangold#
3. https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/medicine/1935/spemann/lecture/
4. Hilde Mangold (1898-1924) and Spemann's organizer: achievement and tragedy
Peter E. Fiissler*, Klaus Sander
Institut ftir Biologie I (Zoologie) der Albert-Ludwigs-Universit~it, Albertstrasse 21 a,
D-79104 Freiburg, Germany
5. Hilde Mangold, Co-Discoverer of the Organizer
VIKTOR HAMBURGER
6. https://veteriankey.com/development-of-important-model-species-ii-vertebrates/
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration -
Dr. George Washington Carver or how to have God as your lab assistant
Born just as slavery was abolished, Dr. George Washington Carver has managed to change the agricultural landscape of America through pure empiricism and perseverance and was one of the first African-American pioneers and inventors who rose all by himself to popularity and international recognition.
Take a listen to te biography of a man that has touched many lives only by being his humble but eccentric self and through his geniune admiration of all God's creation. A man who was driven by pure curiosity and gratitude, who approched research as a way of being. Maybe his life will inspire you to look at every day as an oportunity to be in awe (of how beautiful nature is, of course, you little cynic). #LivesToRemember
A few resources
1. Biography “The Man who talked with the flowers” by Glenn Clark
2. https://www.britannica.com/biography/George-Washington-Carver
3. https://blackiowa.org/?s=carver
4. https://science.howstuffworks.com/innovation/famous-inventors/george-washington-carvers-inventions.htm
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration -
Dr. Eng. Eliza Leonida-Zamfirescu (or how to crush your oposition with an ungodly amount of patience and work)
Have you ever asked yourself who were the first women that had the courage to go against society's expectations and pursue "unfeminine" careers such as engineering? (the only answer accepted here is "yes", sorry).
Then you might be interested in finding out more about one of the first womn engineer, Eliza Leonida-Zamfirescu, a courageous woman who chose science in a time when following such interests were unheard of and frowned upon. She wasn't only gifted with a sharp mind and curiosity, but also with a kind and tender heart that determined her to serve as a nurse in WWI for her country and later on to donate her retirement money. Techniques and chemical synthesis methods developed by her are still valuable to this day, more than a hundred years later.
I hope you'll enjoy this episode and please don't hesitate to leave me some feedback through my email or filling in the short survey, it'll help me tremendously! Thanks a lot!
More info: https://www.europeana.eu/de/exhibitions/pioneers/elisa-leonida-zamfirescu
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
Email: choosingscience@gmail.com
Instagram: choosing.science
Twitter: @LivesToRemember
Survey of your opinion on the podcast: Survey: https://de.surveymonkey.com/r/LZDNHDW
#LivesToRemember #Science #Biography #Inspiration