9,109 research outputs found

    Kondolenzschreiben bezüglich Max Plancks Tod von Max Delbrück

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    Scan des Kondolenzschreibens an Marga Planck anlässlich des Todes von Max Planck am 4.10.1947. Mehr Informationen zu den Kondolenzen sind in Band 2 der Reihe Kieler Beiträge zu Max Planck zu finden. Eine Kurzdarstellung zu Max Planck und weitere Referenzen finden sich in Band 1

    Delbrück Max (1906-81)

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    Delbrück Max (1906-81) - biogram.Delbrück Max (1906-81) - short biography

    Pauli Manuscript Collection: Summary

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    Summary of an article by Max Delbrück: "Current Views on the Reproduction of Bacteriophages"

    La materia e la mente: lezioni di epistemologia evolutiva

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    La mente nasce dalla materia ? Da questa domanda scaturisce il viaggio attraverso la scienza, all'origine di questo libro, che Max Delbrück proponeva ai suoi studenti in California

    Pauli Manuscript Collection: Confidential report

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    Report [to Pauli] of a discussion, may be between Max Delbrück, Niels Bohr and [?]. About a "famous" letter written by [N. Bohr] to [W. Pauli]

    Pauli Biographical Collection: Manuscript

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    Manuscript by M. Delbrück. Comparison between atomic physics and molecular biology

    Pauli letter collection: letter to Max Delbrück

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    Pauli thanks Delbrück for the copy of his lecture. He hopes that biology will soon have a development analogous to that of physics from 1900 - 1905. He is interested in processes in living organisms which cannot be explained by quantum mechanics. There may exist in living organisms, besides statistical laws, an additional interdependence which might explain biological evolution

    A Physicist’s Quest in Biology: Max Delbrück and “Complementarity”

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    Abstract Max Delbruck was trained as a physicist but made his major contribution in biology and ultimately shared a Nobel Prize in Physiology/Medicine. He was. Max Delbrück was trained as a physicist but made his major contribution in biology and ultimately shared a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. He was the acknowledged leader of the founders of molecular biology, yet he failed to achieve his key scientific goals. His ultimate scientific aim was to find evidence for physical laws unique to biology: so-called “complementarity.” He never did. The specific problem he initially wanted to solve was the nature of biological replication but the discovery of the mechanism of replication was made by others, in large part because of his disdain for the details of biochemistry. His later career was spent investigating the effect of light on the fungus Phycomyces, a topic that turned out to be of limited general interest. He was known both for his informality but also for his legendary displays of devastating criticism. His life and that of some of his closest colleagues was acted out against a background of a world in conflict. This essay describes the man and his career and searches for an explanation of his profound influence.</jats:p

    Max Delbrueck zum Hundertsten [The legacy of Max Delbrueck]

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    Max Delbruecks beruehmte Phygenschule gilt als die Keimzelle der Molekularbiologie. 2006 waere er 100 Jahre alt geworden. Fritz Melchers zeigt auf persoenliche Weise, dass Delbruecks Geist der modernen Bioforschung immer noch viel geben kann. Max Delbrueck's famous phage school is considered to be the germ cell of molecular biology. Fritz Melchers shows in a very personal way that Delbrueck's genius still has much to offer modern biological research
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