Of science, history and imagination
Nov. 8th, 2011 11:31 amI'm currently in my second week of my new PhD job and, as it goes with starting new scientific projects, I'm reading up on what has already been discovered in the field. For a new technique we will try to develop, I needed some really basic background information, which I couldn't find in any recent articles. So I was going back further and further in time, until yesterday I found myself reading an article written in 1943 by a person named A. Romanoff from Cornell University in New York. This got me thinking, who was this person, writing scientific articles about chicken embryonic development (because that's what it was about) in the thick of war time? Was he perhaps a young man, contemplating joining up the army? Or perhaps old and disappointed with the state of the world, retracted into his ivory tower and only living for his scientific projects? Was he perhaps of Russian descent (because of his name) and wrestling with his thoughts about the war and everything going on in his home country? If I was more of a writer, I could almost have written a story about this man. Scientific fan-fiction, just imagine! ( I didn't google the dear fellow, for fear of spoiling the nice image which had formed inside my mind)
Anyway, isn't it nice to think that, whoever he was, his work still lives on over 65 years later and the information he unearthed will be of great use to my experiments?
That's not the only thing I wanted to share with you today. I also wanted to ask who would like to receive a Christmas card from me? Please leave your answers and your adress in a comment (comments are screened). I'll try to find some really typically Dutch Christmas cards for you all!
Anyway, isn't it nice to think that, whoever he was, his work still lives on over 65 years later and the information he unearthed will be of great use to my experiments?
That's not the only thing I wanted to share with you today. I also wanted to ask who would like to receive a Christmas card from me? Please leave your answers and your adress in a comment (comments are screened). I'll try to find some really typically Dutch Christmas cards for you all!
no subject
Date: 2011-11-09 10:44 pm (UTC)Could I please have a Christmas card? I can send you my address in a private message.
no subject
Date: 2011-11-10 07:39 am (UTC)It's fine if you send the adress in a private message or email.