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Trofim Lysenko was a Ukrainian peasant whose malign influence dominated biology in the Soviet Union and its imperium through most of Stalin's reign. Lysenko owed his ascendancy to repeated promises that he would rescue Soviet agriculture from the catastrophic state into which it had sunk, following Stalin's disastrous policy of collectivisation of the farms, and a succession of bad harvests. He claimed to have devised methods of imposing desirable hereditary characteristics on plants, and even of converting one species into another at will. He noisily denounced modern genetics as a bourgeois imposture, a view that resonated well with Marxist doctrine. As Lysenko's power grew he was able to smother scientific debate, and to crush all opposition through the arrest and often execution of many leading scientists. Lysenko's preposterous theories became the accepted orthodoxy in the academies and universities of Eastern Europe, and were greeted with enthusiasm by many Communist intellectuals in the West, not least in France. The Lysenko phenomenon is the most extreme, but by no means the only example of the perversion of science by ideology, often with the acquiescence of the scientific community. Nor can we be confident that nothing of the kind could happen today.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/medsci/2005212203 | DOI Listing |
Chem Sci
March 2025
A.N. Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds, Russian Academy of Sciences 28 Vavilova Str. Moscow 119334 Russia
Organic compounds with boron-nitrogen bonds are widely used as fluorescent sensors and semiconducting materials. This paper presents a new approach for the formation of B-N bonds catalytic insertion of nitrenes into B-H bonds. The reaction proceeds most selectively for cyclic boranes with a 2-phenylpyridine framework and nitrenes generated by the oxidation of sulfonamides and sulfamates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2025
Department of Physical Sciences, Ariel University, Ariel, Israel.
This study investigates the fabrication of large-area, highly-ordered monolayers of PbTe quantum dots (QDs) on TiO2/ITO substrate, using a fast, simple, and repeatable spin-coating technique. For the first time, a real monolayer (a layer with the height of a single QD) covering approximately 3 cm2 was successfully prepared, achieving a root-mean-square roughness (Rq) of 1.37 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2025
Department of Physics, Ariel University, Ariel, 40700, Israel.
The literature shows a lack of significant research on the synthesis of large spherical PbTe quantum dots (QDs), particularly with controllable sizes and morphology. Here, we present for the first time a novel hot-injection method for the tunable, high-quality synthesis of cubooctahedral PbTe QDs within the size range of 10 nm to 16 nm. This method employs a combination of oleic acid (OA) with shorter carboxylic acids, including octanoic (OctA), decanoic (DA), and lauric acids (LA), tested at various volumetric ratios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDalton Trans
February 2025
Department of Chemistry, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gory 1-3, 119991 Moscow, Russia.
Two platinide plumbides, EuPtPb and SrPtPb, were discovered using high-temperature exploratory synthesis and flux-assisted crystal growth. Their crystal structures were determined from single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Both compounds crystallize in the orthorhombic system; EuPtPb belongs to the YRhSn structure type (2, = 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDalton Trans
January 2025
Department of Chemistry, Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia.
In pursuit of identifying less toxic hybrid compounds suitable for optoelectronic applications, we synthesized a novel homopiperazinium bromoantimonate(III), (CHN){SbBr}. It readily crystallized from an aqueous hydrobromic acid solution and was found to be stable both in air and upon heating up to 175 °C. The crystal structure of the new bromoantimonate(III) consisted of {SbBr} zigzag chains, which were composed of strongly trigonally distorted SbBr octahedral anions and CHN dications.
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