ABSTRACT

What prompts a well-renowned scientist in molecular biology to write memoirs about a part of his life? In the case of Gunther Stent, it was not to reflect on his career as a scientist, but to come to an understanding of his own soul. In his seventies, he had come to see that he had been, throughout his life, an emotional sleepwalker, especially as regards women and, in addition, that he had been troubled by Jewish self-hatred. His story may have more to do with St. Augustine's Confessions than with a scientist's memoirs.

Stent provides insight into the power of political correctness, and the ability of a government to establish a perverse vision of reality. For readers interested in bioethics, Stent's memoirs help to explain how Germany could have been the first country to enact an all-encompassing protection for human research subjects while it was also the country that produced the medical experiments of the Nazis and the greatest perversion of medical morality in history.

Stent is a person of intelligence and subtlety, an accomplished writer, a deep and wise man, and a loyal friend. His narrative is centered emotionally on a youth spent in Berlin in the Nazi period. As a boy of fourteen he was an eyewitness of the horrors of the Kristallnacht pogrom.On New Year's Eve 1938 he escaped from Germany across the "green frontier." He came to America in his teens, only to return to Berlin at the end of World War II as a scientific consultant for the U.S. Military. On his return to the States, Stent participated in the exciting early scientific breakthroughs of molecular biology that transformed the twentieth-century life sciences.

His Nazis, Women and Molecular Biology is a piercing self-examination, and as its review in Science Newsletter says, "an act of self-exposure, abnegation, contrition, and expiation." It will be of keen interest to those who have inhabited Stent's worlds or shared his experiences, as well as those who wish to learn more about them.

Gunther S. Stent is professor emeritus of neurobiology at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of such classic texts as Molecular Biology of Bacterial Viruses and Molecular Genetics, as well as philosophical books, such as The Coming of the Golden Age, Paradoxes of Progress, and, most recently (2002), Paradoxes of Free Will.

part 1|155 pages

Following My Nightmare

chapter 1|12 pages

Waking Up in Berlin

chapter 2|14 pages

Top of the Line (Second Category)

chapter 3|6 pages

The American Presence

chapter 4|8 pages

Intelligence (So-Called)

chapter 5|7 pages

Mother Goes Away

chapter 6|11 pages

German Youth Movement (Second Category)

chapter 7|9 pages

The Proud Dead

chapter 8|11 pages

The School for Self-Esteem

chapter 9|10 pages

Practicing Escaping

chapter 10|9 pages

The Surprise Stepmother

chapter 11|7 pages

Kristallnacht

chapter 12|13 pages

Escaping

chapter 13|8 pages

In Hitler’s Lair

chapter 14|8 pages

Retrieving the Past

chapter 15|5 pages

Poor, Lonely, and Bored

chapter 16|10 pages

A Happy New Year’s Eve

chapter 17|5 pages

Holding Pattern

part 2|104 pages

Changing Cultures

chapter 18|13 pages

The Soda Jerk

chapter 19|7 pages

The Smoothie

chapter 20|11 pages

Playing House

chapter 21|9 pages

Jewish Greeks

chapter 22|6 pages

Discovering Science

chapter 23|18 pages

Jilted

chapter 24|15 pages

Upgrading the Dream

chapter 25|6 pages

Finessing Mother Nature

chapter 26|4 pages

“What Is Life?”

chapter 27|13 pages

Slithering Away

part 3|128 pages

Stumbling into the Scientific Big Time

chapter 28|17 pages

The Sophisticate

chapter 29|17 pages

My Hero

chapter 30|8 pages

Stepping Out with Mother Nature

chapter 31|15 pages

The Good Scientific Life

chapter 32|9 pages

The Even Better Scientific Life

chapter 33|13 pages

Delbrück’s Salon

chapter 34|8 pages

Delbrück’s Conclave

chapter 35|3 pages

Speaking the Same Language

chapter 36|5 pages

Delbrück’s Creed

chapter 37|12 pages

Viruses Under One Hat

chapter 38|19 pages

Awakening