[Human Factor] In Honor of a Different Kind of Code Hacker

Published 30 July 04 08:15 PM | CSharpener

Francis Crick, who, in 1953, unravelled the structure of DNA along with James D. Watson, died on July 28, 2004. Crick and Watson's discoveries led to our present understanding of the genetic code, which is arguably far more important to all of us than the computer code we celebrate on our weblogs every day.

For details and an appreciation, see Francis Crick, DNA Helix Discoverer, Dies at 88, Francis Crick one of the most brilliant and influential scientists of all time MRC statement, and Remembering a DNA pioneer.

Let us all pause for a few nanoseconds to give thanks for a life of value, one that was truly well-lived.

I must hasten to add that we should equally give thanks for the unfortunately short life of Rosalind Franklin (1920 - 1958), who should rightfully have shared the glory for elucidating the structure of DNA (also, see this article contributed by a commentor to this post: Rosalind Franklin: Unsung Hero of the DNA Revolution). Perhaps it is not too late to redress her ommission from the historical credit for this great scientific discovery. Surely, Rosalind Franklin's name should be recorded as one of our many "Great Women of Science!"

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Comments

# Don Newman said on July 31, 2004 04:05 AM:

I was listening to this on the radio the other night. He was a great and humble man. It is hard to believe how far the field of genetics has advanced since his discovery which was not that long ago. Truly one of the greatest feats in reverse engineering.

# JosephCooney said on July 31, 2004 08:43 AM:

The way I heard it told, Watson got a "sneak peak" at some interesting XRay pictures of DNA taken by Rosalind Franklin, and wrote the rest up from there, but I'm no historian of science.

http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ht/36.1/rapoport.html

# John Tobler said on July 31, 2004 02:15 PM:

A couple more articles: Francis Crick – Biography (http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1962/crick-bio.html) and Francis Crick dies (http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20040729/05/).

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