Research Seminar November 18th: Greg Radick - Mendel the Fraud? A Social History of Truth in Genetics

Research Seminar November 18th: Greg Radick - Mendel the Fraud? A Social History of Truth in Genetics. The seminar will take place in Gilman *496* at 18:00.

13 November 2019

Greg Radick

University of Leeds

Mendel the Fraud? A Social History of Truth in Genetics

Two things about Gregor Mendel are common knowledge: first, that he was the "monk in the garden" whose experiments with peas in mid-nineteenth-century Moravia became the starting point for genetics; second, that, despite that exalted status, there is something fishy, maybe even fraudulent, about the data that Mendel reported. This talk will explore the cultural politics of this accusation of fraudulence against Mendel. Although the notion that Mendel's numbers were, in statistical terms, too good to be true was well understood almost immediately after the famous "rediscovery" of his work in 1900, the problem became widely discussed and agonized over only from the 1960s, for reasons having as much to do with Cold War geopolitics as with traditional concerns about the objectivity of science. Appreciating the Cold War origins of the problem as we have inherited it can, I will suggest, be a helpful step towards shifting the discussion in more productive directions, scientific as well as historiographic.

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