BOOKS REVIEWED IN THIS ESSAY
Harvard University Press, 397 pp., $29.95
Wiley, 294 pp., $19.95
Plume, 338 pp., $9.95 (paper)
Harvard University Press, 372 pp., $12.95 (paper)
National Academy Press, 116 pp., $14.95 (paper)
Simon and Schuster, 352 pp., $10.95 (paper)
Basic Books, 368 pp., $23.00
Basic Books, 207 pp., $10.95 (paper)
National Academy Press, 200 pp., $24.95 (prepublication copy)
Scientists are public figures, and like other public figures with a sense of their own importance, they self-consciously compare themselves and their work to past monuments of culture and history. Modern biology, especially molecular biology, has undergone two such episodes of preening before the glass of history. The first, characteristic of a newly developing field that promises to solve important problems that have long resisted the methods of an older tradition, has used the metaphor of revolution. Tocqueville observed that when the bourgeois monarchy was overthrown on February 24, 1848, the Deputies compared themselves consciously to the 'Girondins' and the 'Montagnards' of the National Convention of 1793.
Review, 10184 words
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