01293 2200241 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001100123084001700134100001800151245006100169260001400230300003600244500002000280520067300300650001100973700001700984990002501001990002501026INLIS00000000000106020221112090653 a0010-0520001060221112 | | ind  a0-09-945184-0 aind a572.86 a572.86 WAT d0 aWatson, James1 aDNA :bThe Secret Of Life /cJames Watson & Andrew Berry bArrow,c- aXXII, 487 hlm. ; 20 cm ;c20 cm aIndeks : Indeks aDNA has moved from being an esoteric molecule only of interest to a handful of specialists to being the heart of a technology that is transforming many aspects of the way we all live. With that transformation has come a host of difficult questions about its impact - practical, social, and ethical. Taking the fiftieth anniversary as an opportunity to pause and take stock of where we are, we give an unabashedly personal view both of the history and of the issues. Moreover, it is James D. Watson's personal view and is accordingly written in the first-person singular. The double helix was already ten years old when DNA was working its in utero magic on a fetal AB. 4a1. DNA0 aAndrew Berry a01650/MKRI-P/II-2005 a01650/MKRI-P/II-2005