Science History Podcast

Science History Podcast


Latest Episodes

Episode 75. Retrospective: Oliver Sacks
February 11, 2024

In 1994, while attending graduate school at the University of California, Berkeley, I had the pleasure of seeing a lecture by Oliver Sacks in which he discussed his work on sleeping sickness and vario

Episode 74. Novichok: Vil Mirzayanov
January 11, 2024

Novichok is the most deadly chemical weapon ever developed. With us to discuss the history of Novichok is Vil Mirzayanov. Vil worked in the secret Soviet chemical weapons laboratory that developed Nov

Episode 73. Pascual Jordan's Duplicity: Ryan Dahn
December 10, 2023

How could a brilliant scientist and mathematician, an innovator in quantum theory, who worked closely with Jewish colleagues, become an ardent Nazi? How did this man, who has a field of mathematics na

Episode 72. Scientific Espionage: Eli Lake
November 11, 2023

Many of the most important secrets held in international contests are technological or scientific in nature, and wars are often settled due to technological superiority of one side over the other. Thi

Episode 71. Retrospective: The Franck-Hertz Experiment
October 11, 2023

A retrospective on the Franck-Hertz experiment, which resulted in James Franck and Gustav Hertz receiving the 1925 Nobel Prize in Physics. Image credit: By Infoczo - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://co

Episode 70. Retrospective: James Franck
September 11, 2023

A retrospective on James Franck, recipient of the 1925 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Episode 69. Ancient DNA: Maanasa Raghavan
August 11, 2023

The ability to extract DNA from ancient fragments of biological material has revolutionized our understanding of recent evolutionary history, including human evolution and phylogeography. Analysis of

Episode 68. Pandemics: Leslie Reperant
July 11, 2023

The world just experienced a devastating pandemic, yet in the context of historical pandemics, COVID-19 was a relatively minor event in the history of disease. What do we know about the history of pan

Episode 67. Lazaretto: David Barnes
June 11, 2023

Before the advent of the germ theory of disease in the 1870s, quarantine provided one of the few effective means to prevent or alleviate epidemics. The Lazaretto quarantine station in Philadelphia ill

Episode 66. Climbing, Chemistry & Policy: Arlene Blum
May 12, 2023

What are the commonalities between scaling the world's highest peaks and tackling the most challenging pollution problems? What was it like to enter the worlds of climbing and chemistry as a woman in