Crick A mind in motion

Matthew Cobb

Book - 2025

"What are the moments that make a life? In Francis Crick's, the decisive moment came in 1951, when he first met James Watson. Their ensuing discovery of the structure of DNA made Crick world-famous. But neither that chance meeting nor that discovery made Crick who he was. As Matthew Cobb shows in Crick, it is another chance encounter, with a line from the writing of Beat poet Michael McClure, that reveals Crick's character: 'THIS IS THE POWERFUL KNOWLEDGE,' it shouted. Crick, having read it, would keep it with him for the rest of his life, a token of his desire to solve the riddles of existence. John Keats once accused scientists of merely wanting to 'unweave the rainbow,' but it was an irrepressible, Roma...ntic urge to wonder that defined Crick, as much as a desire to find out the basis of life in DNA and the workings of our minds. For the first time ever, Cobb presents the full portrait of Crick, a scientist and a man: his triumphs and failings, insights and oversights. Crick set out to find the powerful knowledge. Almost miraculously, he did."--Dust jacket flap.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Basic Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Matthew Cobb (author)
Edition
First US edition
Physical Description
viii, 595 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781541602885
  • Prologue
  • Becoming Crick
  • 1. Averagely bright
  • 2. Cambridge
  • 3. Watson
  • 4. The double helix
  • 5. Watson and Crick
  • The Central Problem
  • 6. The new world
  • 7. Et in Arcadia ego
  • 8. Mad sessions with Sydney
  • 9. An apotheosis of genetics
  • The Swinging Sixties
  • 10. Fame
  • 11. Triumph and betrayal
  • 12. Finding a new focus
  • 13. Edwardian ideas
  • 14. Nonsense in Nature
  • Interlude
  • 15. Creative writing
  • California Dreaming
  • 16. The last of England
  • 17. Crick re-ignited
  • 18. The windmills of your mind
  • 19. Towards consciousness
  • 20. The influencer
  • 21. So why wait?
  • Closing Time
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgements
  • List of archival sources
  • Notes
  • List of Illustrations
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Cobb (The Genetic Age), a professor emeritus of zoology at the University of Manchester, captures the era when DNA and the genetic code were still a mystery in this comprehensive biography of Francis Crick, the scientist who, along with James Watson and others, discovered the structure of DNA. Cobb portrays Crick as an endlessly curious man (he was still "excited as a schoolboy" about new ideas, one acquaintance said shortly before Crick's death at 88 in 2004) and conveys the sense of wonder and delight that accompany scientific problem solving. While Crick is inextricably linked with DNA, Cobb emphasizes that he also made significant contributions to neuroscience, bringing global attention to the cellular and molecular underpinnings of human consciousness. Along the way, Cobb acknowledges some of the scientist's more problematic behavior, including his eugenicist views and extramarital affairs, but disputes accusations that Crick and Watson made their DNA discovery by stealing data from scientist Rosalind Franklin, arguing that new evidence suggests Franklin was an active collaborator. The result is a richly detailed picture of a brilliant and innovative, if flawed, man. Readers will be captivated. (Nov.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

From the structure of life to the matter of mind. Francis Crick, the British biologist who, along with James Watson, won the Nobel Prize for discovering the structure of DNA, has always been a controversial figure--known for wild sex parties, endorsing eugenics, possibly stealing data. Cobb, a zoologist and science writer, wants to get these less savory aspects of Crick's character out of the way quickly, suggesting, for instance, that Crick's wife was "amused" and "sometimes profited" from his many affairs, the details of which, Cobb states, are "simply not our business." Well, sure--but by that logic, neither is his gastric reflux or the print of his wallpaper, but Cobb is happy to share these in this exhaustively--and exhaustingly--detailed biography. Cobb is at his best when it comes to the science--able to explain in page-turning prose why, for instance, scientists once thought genes were made of proteins, not DNA, or what made it so challenging to deduce a molecule's three-dimensional shape from two-dimensional images. It was truly a monumental achievement when Crick, as he announced in a 1953 letter to his 12-year-old son, "found the basic copying mechanism by which life, comes from life"--signed, "Daddy." Cobb explains that Crick was drawn to questions that "seemed incomprehensible, so people tended to view them in a religious or mystical light": What is life? What is mind? The latter landed him in La Jolla, California, in the 1960s, where he tripped on LSD and joined a group of scientists intent on proving Crick's "astonishing hypothesis": that the whole miracle of experience comes down to the firings of neurons in the brain, just as the miracle of life came down to genes coiled in a double helix. In trying to turn philosophical questions about the mind into experimental science, Crick, Cobb contends, "helped propel the development of modern neuroscience." Unfortunately, the "neural correlates of consciousness" he sought until his death in 2004 remain at large. A knowledgeable but bloated biography of one of the biggest names in science. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.