Nathaniel Comfort has spent 10 years of his life studying music, 10 years studying science, and the last 20 years studying history. "What I try to do, really, is integrate all of those things," he tells me. "I try to write about science musically if I can."
He did just that in his 2001 biography of the geneticist and Nobel Laureate Barbara McClintock, which tackled the science and gender politics of the iconic researcher head on ("This book dismantles the McClintock myth in seven steps …"). He's since published and edited books on intelligent design and genomic medicine, and is working on a project on the origins of life.
Today a professor at the Institute of the History of Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Comfort has devoted himself to what he sees as the science historian's role: to make science intelligible, and to provide context and social relevance.
Nautilus sat down with Comfort in his Baltimore home.
The video interview plays at the top of the screen.
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What's the role of a science historian?
Why do we need historians if we've got journalists and scientists themselves? Journalists are excellent. Good…
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