"This would be an ideal volume for senior capstone courses in science and society courses in liberal arts colleges. He shows how an emergence arises as we shift life science from the molecule to the macromolecule, organelle, gene, chromosome, cell, individual, species, population, and to ecosystems and evolution. He explores the concepts of life and death through folklore, golems, vampires, androids, artificial intelligence, and literature (Franken-stein) as well as raises the inherent contradistinction of "killing the dead." Goldman also explores the problems of personhood as event or process, the struggles of theologians looking for distinctions between soul and self-awareness, and whether sperm and eggs are alive and thus have personhood or lack it. Unlike science, where components and processes are explained as excursions into physical reality, Goldman forces readers to reflect on the status of "half-life," as he designates viruses, prions, and transposons in biology." --The Quarterly Review of Biology
"In his new book, Goldman - not only a first-rank neuroscientist but also a first-rank writer - provides a fresh and fascinating view on the self and the soul, the brain and the body. A must-read for scientists and society." --Katharina Domschke, Chair and Full Professor of Psychiatry, University of Freiburg, Germany
"Reading David Goldman's Immortal is much like listening to a trusted older brother explaining how life, death, epigenetic research and a myriad of other things all tie together. It's full of color and anecdote but at the same time informed by science and a profound understanding of the subject. The tone is casual but still conveys a quiet sense of magic and wonder," --Rickard L Sjöberg, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Neurosurgery at Umeå University,
"Dr. David Goldman tackles life's essential issues - the self, the meaning of life, and the inevitability of death - in this truly evocative and informative volume. Written by one of the nation's leading genomic scientists, the book combines personal vignettes with cutting edge scientific data to provide empathic yet highly rational perspectives on these complex and vexing questions. A tour de force by a brilliant and illuminating writer." --Anil K. Malhotra, M.D., The Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell
1. Death2. HeLa: The resurrection of Henrietta Lacks3. Persistence of memory4. Hel: Goddess of death and life5. Where self-resides6. Our diploid selves7. Our cellular selves8. From molecule to self9. The ancient divide between molecule and self10. Viruses and other half-life11. Altruism, of cell and self12. Shrines and museums13. Robbing the grave14. Birth15. Anastasia