a-glimpse-into-a-scientists-mind-through-chalk-drawings-stoc-1282277572-stockpack-adobe_stock Type post Date August 15, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMetascienceScientific Trustworthiness Tagged , ambition, American Council for Science and Health, COVID-19, CRISPR, data integrity, dishonesty, honesty, London School of Economics, peer review, perverse incentives, prestige, recognition, replication, science, scientific integrity, scientists, trust, truth, wealth Why Scientists Lie Science & Culture August 15, 2025 Bioethics, Metascience, Scientific Trustworthiness 3 One thing that will really help the discussion, going forward, is to quit blaming the public for not trusting science. Read More ›
Louis Pasteur Type post Author Ann Gauger Date December 27, 2022 CategoriesHistory of ScienceMedicineOrigin of Life Tagged , bacteria, France, Louis Pasteur, plagiarism, Roman Catholic, scientific integrity, spontaneous generation, stroke, Vaccines Louis Pasteur, in Memoriam Ann Gauger December 27, 2022 History of Science, Medicine, Origin of Life 7 “There is a time in every man's life when he looks to his God, when he looks at his life, when he wonders how he will be remembered.” Read More ›
Siddhartha Mukherjee Type post Author Brendan Dixon Date March 3, 2017 CategoriesEthicsGeneticsHistory of ScienceScientific Trustworthiness Tagged , __nedited, book reviews, crystallography, DNA, double helix, gene, genomics, Health & Wellness, intelligent design, Linus Pauling, medicine, perverse incentives, Research, scientific integrity, Watson and Crick Siddhartha Mukherjee’s History of Genomics Is a Story with a Lesson Brendan Dixon March 3, 2017 Ethics, Genetics, History of Science, Scientific Trustworthiness 8 Writing history is hard. The details and dates, people and places can tumble over one another. Read More ›