1953 in science

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The year 1953 involved numerous significant events in science and technology, including the first description of the DNA double helix, the discovery of neutrinos, and the release of the first polio vaccine.

BiologyEdit

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25 April 1953: the DNA double helix is first formally described.

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1962, they will share the Nobel Prize in Medicine with Maurice Wilkins, who publishes X-ray crystallography results for DNA in the same issue of Nature in 1953.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The third related article published at the same time is by Rosalind Franklin and Raymond Gosling, on "Molecular Configuration in Sodium Thymonucleate".<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Francis Crick (1916–2004) and James Watson (b. 1928) together discovered the double helix structure of DNA, the "blueprint of life." Surprisingly, when ... Template:Webarchive history1900s.about.com</ref>

ChemistryEdit

Computer sciencesEdit

Earth sciencesEdit

MathematicsEdit

Medicine and human sciencesEdit

PaleontologyEdit

PhysicsEdit

TechnologyEdit

EventsEdit

  • January 13 – "Doctors' plot": The state newspaper Pravda publishes an article alleging that many of the Soviet Union's top doctors are part of a major plot to poison the country's senior political and military leaders.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • February 16 – The Pakistan Academy of Sciences is established.
  • October 9 – As part of an extended series of publications on science, Pope Pius XII publishes "The Technician", which instructs scientists to restrict themselves to the study of physical matter and do nothing to undermine the idea of a non-material soul or a Superior Being. "The Technician" is delivered as a papal address on October 9.
  • Rudolf Carnap publishes an article called "Testability and Meaning" in Readings in the Philosophy of Science, which moves away from the philosophical position of logical positivism with respect to science (particularly the heavily mathematical sciences, such as physics). Carnap instead emphasizes the idea that progress in science depends on the gradual accumulation of many small results that support human understanding of the world, a view more in line with Ludwig Wittgenstein's later philosophy and the biological sciences.

PrizesEdit

Nobel PrizeEdit

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BirthsEdit

DeathsEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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