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The zymotechnic roots of biotechnology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Robert Bud
Affiliation:
The Science Museum, South Kensington, London SW7 2DD.

Extract

Louis Pasteur plays a role in the creation myth of biotechnology which resembles the heroic position of his great antagonist Liebig in the story of agricultural chemistry. His intellectual development, expressed in a great book, supposedly underlay a revolution in practice. Similarly, biotechnology is conventionally traced back to Pasteur, through whose influence, it has been assumed, ancient crafts were transformed into an applicable science of microbiology. The emphasis on Pasteur's work in the history of biotechnology has served to bolster the image of progress in the technology following from periodic scientific breakthroughs. Elsewhere I have argued that biotechnology can be better seen as a boundary object, to use Star and Griesemer's terminology, between biology and engineering. As such it has been significant throughout this century, and the word has been used since 1917.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1992

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References

The author wishes to express his gratitude for the kind help and advice of Ms Judit Brody, Dr Ernst Homburg (Katholieke Universiteit, Nijmegen), Professor O. B. Jørgensen (Copenhagen Polytechnic), Mrs Nechama Shalom (Weizmann Archives), Mr W. Siebel (J. E. Siebel Sons Inc.) and the referees of this article. The work was done with the support of the Science Museum.

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15 In general my treatment of the German agricultural colleges and stations follows the recent extensive analysis of Ursula Schling-Brodersen, Entwicklung und Institutionalisierung der Agriculturchemie im 19. Jahrhundert: und die Landwirtschaftlichen Versuchsstationen, Braunschweiger Veröffentlichungen zur Geschichte der Pharmazie und der Naturwissenschaften, 31, Braunschweig, 1989.

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41 Quoted in Reinharz, , op. cit. (39), 302.Google Scholar

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43 I am grateful to Professor Jehuda Reinharz, the biographer of Weizmann, for the opportunity to discuss the hypothesis. Bergmann gives an example of a similar rclationship between Weizmann's Zionist dreams and the needs of Britain before the Second World War. Then he was looking for a conversion process for Palestinian shale. The so-called ‘catarole’ cracking process that Weizmann developed was first implemented at the Partington Oil Refinery, now Shell's Carrington Plant, near Manchester, where it was to be the basis of the first British petrochemical complex. Ernst David Bergmann, ‘Dr Weizmann's scientific work in the framework of the industrial and political development of his time’, Weizmann Archives.

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45 Aarbog for Københavns Universitet, Kommunitet og den polytekniske Læranstalt, indeholdende Meddelelser for det akademiske Aar 1907–1908, udgivet efter Konsitoriums Foranstaltning af H. Munch-Petersen (Copenhagen: Universitetebogytrykkeriat, 1912), ‘Oprettelse af en fast Lærerstilling i Gæringsysiologi og landbotanisk Kemi’, p. 367. I am grateful to Professor O. B. Jørgensen of the Danish Technical University for pointing out this passage to me.

46 Orla-Jensen, S., Lidt anvendt Filosofi, Copenhagen, 1934, 6.Google Scholar

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49 On the Chicago Bureau see Arnold, John P. and Penman, Frank, op. cit. (32)Google Scholar, though they are incorrect in implying that the Bureau of Biotechnology was founded in 1917. There was no reference to the Bureau of Biotechnology in the article on Siebel, ‘E. A. Siebel Co.’, op. cit. (48). The Chicago Bureau was only one of several similar enterprises under one roof promoted by E. A. Siebel, and was seemingly the least important. It had no entry in the 1930s Chicago telephone directory and kept a low profile in publicity, for instance ‘Achievement. Yesterday. Today. Tomorrow’, E. A. Siebel and Company and Siebel Laboratories, Inc. [nd.] (though it was mentioned there). I am grateful to Mr W. Siebel of J. E. Siebel's Sons, Inc. for assistance in tracing his uncle's firm.

50 ‘Achievement. Yesterday. Today. Tomorrow’, E. A.Siebel and Company and Siebel Laboratories, Inc. [nd.].

51 A leading member of the close communiry of Chicago brewing scientists was the Danish born Dr Max Henius, of the Wahl–Henius Institute. He paid visits to Denmark in both 1914 and 1919 as well as keeping in close touch by letter. See (n.a.) Max Henius. A Biography, Chicago, 1937.Google Scholar

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59 Pringsheim, H., review of Ereky, Karl, Biotechnologie (op. cit. 53)Google Scholar, Die Naturwissenschaften (1919), 7, 112.Google Scholar

60 Lindner, Paul, ‘Allgemeines aus dem Bereich der Biotechnologie’, Zeitschrift für Technische Biologie (1920), 8, 54–6.Google Scholar

61 Meyers Lexikon, 7th edn of 1925, ii, 403Google Scholar; Grosse Brockhaus, 15th edn, ii, 747.Google Scholar

62 See Delbrück, op. cit. (27).