Sunday, May 23, 2021

A scientist who dealt with racism

 Dr. Ernest Everett Just, (August 14, 1883 – October 27, 1941)

 "Since history is not the factual record of events but the dramatic narrative our species superimposes over events, it is historical irony, in the classic Ancient Greek literary sense, that [Dr.] Just was among the biologists whose work laid the foundation for genomics and its sobering revelation that we share 98% of our DNA with a head of broccoli, dwarfing to absurdity the sub-negligible biological differences on which humans peg the artificial othernesses of their senseless biases." 

[Dr] "Just felt increasingly stifled by the swell of racism in his nation’s bosom, which kept him from obtaining a teaching position at a major university worthy of his talent and credentials."

Ernest Everett Just (Marine Biological Laboratory Archives)

Ernest Everett Just (Marine Biological Laboratory Archives)

Dr. Just "...admired as the “black Apollo” of science by the Italian women working at the Neapolitan laboratory for which he left Woods Hole, is the subject of The Vast Wonder of the World  by librarian-turned-author Mélina Mangal and Colombian illustrator Luisa Uribe — a lovey addition to the growing corpus of picture-book biographies of cultural heroes to foment young hearts with inspiration for growing vast minds and tenacious spirits.

Dr. Just "...believed that "life as an event lies in a combination of chemical stuffs exhibiting physical properties; and it is in this combination, i.e., its behavior and activities, and in it alone that we can seek life.".[31] He also wrote: "[L]ife is the harmonious organization of events, the resultant of a communion of structures and reactions",[11] and "We [scientists] have often striven to prove life as wholly mechanistic, starting with the hypothesis that organisms are machines! Living substance is such because it possesses this organization--something more than the sum of its minutest parts"[32] He argued forcefully that the "ectoplasm," the outer region of the cytoplasm, and not the nucleus, constitutes the heart of the dynamic cell. He was convinced that the surface of the egg cell possesses an "independent irritability," which enables the egg (and all cells) to respond productively to diverse stimuli.[33]

Source: Wikepedia

  1.  Just, Ernest Everett (1988). The Biology of the Cell Surface (Facsimile ed.). New York: Garland Pub. ISBN 978-0824013806.
  2.  Just, E. E. (1933), "Cortical cytoplasm and evolution". Am. Nat. 67: 20–29.
  3. ^ Newman, Stuart A. (2009), "E. E. Just's 'independent irritability' revisited: The activated egg as excitable soft matter" Archived 2016-01-18 at the Wayback MachineMolecular Reproduction and Development 76 (11): 966–974.

9 comments:

  1. ...let's just cut to the chase, this is a racist country, PERIOD!

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  2. Good morning,
    Your post has me picturing a group of racists with heads that look like broccoli.
    Our country needs ALL the young bright minds working together. Have a happy day!

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    1. Good image, I don't know why it works, broccoli heads with perhaps cream sauce for blood.

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  3. In his formal work attire of those days.

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    1. Yes, our fathers (and some grandfathers too) worked in ties and white shirts. It wasn't until the 70s that my ex hubby wore pink shirts, and maybe the 90s before office workers wore those shirts with an alligator on them. I haven't been in an office in so long, I hope they wear some shirts!

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    1. I wouldn't know the name of any biologists who have made contributions to the wonders of modern science. But I read an article about Dr. Just.

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  5. So many great scientist out there thanks for sharing.

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