DiscoverEAT LIKE THE ANIMALSEp 1. Curiosity, childhood and the natural world: the making of two scientists
Ep 1. Curiosity, childhood and the natural world: the making of two scientists

Ep 1. Curiosity, childhood and the natural world: the making of two scientists

Update: 2020-06-15
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Are scientists born or made? In Episode 1 we hear about the early years of Professors Steve Simpson and David Raubenheimer, and their childhood investigations into the natural world. From Steve's high school reconstructions of a cow skeleton to David's childhood hypothesis about the harmfulness of bees, we see how two schoolboys grew into two world-renowned scientists. We learn of their meeting at Oxford University and the early experiments with locusts that led to their groundbreaking findings about human nutrition. Along the way we discuss how curiosity makes room for the tenacity to go your own way as a scientist and challenge long-held 'truths' about the world. 


Hosted by novelist Charlotte Wood, the first writer-in-residence at the Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney. 


More details:


EAT LIKE THE ANIMALS


THE CHARLES PERKINS CENTRE, UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY


CHARLOTTE WOOD



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Ep 1. Curiosity, childhood and the natural world: the making of two scientists

Ep 1. Curiosity, childhood and the natural world: the making of two scientists

Stephen Simpson, David Raubenheimer, Charlotte Wood