Can Nanotechnology Save Lives?
Harvard professor and scientific genius George Whitesides believes that nanotechnology will change medicine as we know it
- By Michael Rosenwald
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
Whitesides doesn’t know exactly how he got here. Here being Harvard, this lab, this life. Growing up in a small Kentucky town, the son of a homemaker and a chemical engineer, he stuck out at school. One day, a teacher called his parents and said he’d like to talk with them about their son. Their hearts sank. “‘What’s the little bastard done now?’” Whitesides recalls of his parents’ reaction.
The teacher said, “You’ve got to get your kid out of here. I’ve arranged for him to go to Andover.”
“I had never heard of Andover,” Whitesides says now of the elite Massachusetts prep school. “I didn’t even know what it was. I didn’t know where New England was.”
And then, somehow, he ended up attending Harvard. “I don’t even remember having applied here. I just got a letter at some point admitting me. So I suppose I came here by accident.”
He went on to do graduate work at the California Institute of Technology. In the acknowledgements section of his doctoral dissertation he thanked his adviser, John D. Roberts, for “his patient direction and indirection.” Most graduate students value a mentor’s direction, Whitesides says. “In my case, he didn’t direct me at all. I don’t think I saw him in the years I was there, but we had a nice relationship.”
Whitesides taught at MIT for nearly 20 years before arriving in 1982 at Harvard, where he is something of a rarity. He is a practicing capitalist, for starters. That focuses him on real-world applications, something not all of his colleagues admire, according to Mara Prentiss, a Harvard physics professor who teaches a nanotechnology course with him. “George is greatly admired by many people, but not everyone appreciates his style,” she says. Whitesides doesn’t seem to care. “I presume it’s out there,” he says of any animosity. But he has very little time for those who think that appearing on CNN or starting companies is gauche. He says they can “just take a knitting needle and put it here”—he points at his nose—“and shove it.”
Tom Tritton, president of the Chemical Heritage Foundation, a history and educational organization in Philadelphia, says if you ask anyone in the field to list the world’s top three chemists, Whitesides will make every list. “The sheer breadth of his intellect is astounding,” Tritton says. After receiving the foundation’s highest award, the Othmer Gold Medal, Whitesides spent the day with high-school students in the city. Tritton says one student later offered this observation: “He may be a scientist, but he’s really cool.”
At the heart of almost everything Whitesides does is a contradiction: he works in complex fields of physics, chemistry, biology and engineering, using complex tools—not many people have ever wielded an atomic force microscope—and yet he is obsessed with simplicity. Ask him for an example of simplicity, and he will say, “Google.” He doesn’t mean you should Google the word “simplicity.” He means the Google home page, the spare rectangle on the white field into which millions of people type words to find information on the Internet. Whitesides is mesmerized by this box.
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Comments (3)
I must agree with Mr. Bullock. Though I did find the article interesting, nothing of much significance was brought to my attention. If anything, this seems to be a biographical article on Whitesides.
Posted by Nicholas Durette on October 7,2010 | 02:57 PM
Mr. Bullock it sounds like your knowledge is much more advanced on the subject so probably a 'science' magazine is more appropriate (i.e. Scientific American maybe?). For me a science illiterate it really prompted me to learn more.
It might also be a cultural difference; in our country 'personality' really gets very involved; like our politicians are required to emote more and be the 'guy next door'. Obama gets clobbered for his lack of 'public empathy'.
Posted by Alice Frame on August 28,2010 | 03:57 PM
Seriously:
Is this an article about nanotechnology or about a hero called Whiteside.
Boooooooooooring and did not further my knowldge a great deal
Regards,
L. Bullock (Mr). - British, which probably means disregard.
Posted by LEN BULLOCK on August 4,2010 | 10:24 AM