I Know These People

Fri 18 Apr 2008 @ 1014 — , , , — nosugrefneb    

An old classmate of mine is making big news!

( link)

I Know These People

Thu 03 Apr 2008 @ 1347 — , — nosugrefneb    

A friend and fellow singer of mine in Invoxication appeared in the local Chicago movie, The Break-Up, several months back as a singer in the Tone Rangers. Seems to be making the rounds again, even if the movie was kind of crappy. He’s the dude with long hair and glasses.

I Know These People

Tue 29 Jan 2008 @ 0051 — — nosugrefneb    

I recently wrote at The Differential about a conversation I once had with an alumnus of the lab I worked in during college, who was, at the time, a young, hotshot neurologist who was involved with the treatment of many high profile patients, Christopher Reeve easily the best known among them. Now, he’s just an older, hotter-shotter version of that in a different city.

The Washington Post recently featured him and a few patients of his in their HD podcast.

More Shubin

Thu 17 Jan 2008 @ 1812 — — nosugrefneb    

Dr. Shubin is at it again. He has a guest post up on Pharyngula today discussing his thoughts on his visit with Stephen Colbert.

Let’s see: landmark discovery…book deal…Colbert Report…guest on Pharyngula… I think the only logical thing left to do would be to have him guest-post on this weblog.

I Know These People

Tue 15 Jan 2008 @ 2113 — — nosugrefneb    

Another brush with fame. Neil Shubin, a paleontologist and evolutionary biologist at the University of Chicago and the provost of the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, recently appeared on the Colbert Report. He actually did surprisingly well, given how much Colbert tends to rip people apart and generally mess with their heads.

These days, Shubin is probably one of the best known contemporary evolutionary biologists out there, what with his discovery of Tiktaalik, his recent book, and and his subsequent (inter) national media appearances.

As it happens, he was my anatomy professor in medical school and one of the best, most enthusiastic teachers I’ve ever had. (I also play racquetball in a court adjacent to his occasionally.)

If Mike Huckabee is elected President, and the majority of the country hasn’t emigrated elsewhere as a result, I nominate this guy to be science advisor.

I Know These People

Mon 07 Jan 2008 @ 1731 — — nosugrefneb    

Must be a good time to be at the University of Chicago. Another medical student/faculty combo has put out a fairly high profile paper, this one about religion and doctors and morality and conscience—above all, how clinicians disagree over precisely what conscience is from the context of religion versus secularism. It’s all very deep and—well, I’ll just repost the abstract for you to ponder. The whole thing is here (subscription required).

What role should the physician’s conscience play in the practice of medicine? Much controversy has surrounded the question, yet little attention has been paid to the possibility that disputants are operating with contrasting definitions of the conscience. To illustrate this divergence, we contrast definitions stemming from Abrahamic religions and those stemming from secular moral tradition. Clear differences emerge regarding what the term conscience conveys, how the conscience should be informed, and what the consequences are for violating one’s conscience. Importantly, these basic disagreements underlie current controversies regarding the role of the clinician’s conscience in the practice of medicine. Consequently participants in ongoing debates would do well to specify their definitions of the conscience and the reasons for and implications of those definitions. This specification would allow participants to advance a more philosophically and theologically robust conversation about the means and ends of medicine.

This is yet another publication from Ryan Lawrence, a second-year student here, and Farr Curlin, an internist, ethicist, and (almost uncomfortably) outspokenly religious researcher of the role of religion in medicine (but overall a very thoughtful and very good guy). At this point, he’s perhaps the best known researcher on this topic in the country. Together, the two published five articles in 2007 alone, once in NEJM and thrice in AJOB, twice just with the two of them and thrice with other collaborators. Let’s just say it was a good year for them.

In addition, a great Cancer Research paper just came out of my lab on the role of paxillin in lung cancer, culminating several years’ worth of hard work and a hell of a lot of outside collaboration. You should check it out (subscription required, I believe).

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