PODCAST · education
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot (2010)
by Milad Pirasteh
🎙️ New Podcast Episode: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot (2010) 🧬✨Get ready for a mind-blowing journey into science, ethics, and a story that changed medicine forever! 🔬💡 Henrietta Lacks, an African American woman from the 1950s, unknowingly became the foundation of groundbreaking medical research when her cells—known as HeLa cells—were taken without her consent. Her legacy has saved countless lives, but her own family was left in the dark for decades.In this episode, we dive deep into bioethics, medical racism, and the hidden human stories behind scientific breakthroughs. How did Henrietta’s cells revolutionize medicine? What rights do we have over our own biology? And how does her story still impact us today?Hit play now! 🎧🔥
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The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (book by Thomas S. Kuhn)
🎙️ EPISODE DROP: Paradigm Shifts & Scientific Shakeups! 🌍🔬📚In this episode, Josh dives into Thomas S. Kuhn’s legendary book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions 🚀. What really drives scientific progress? Why do big ideas suddenly flip the script? 🤯💥 Expect clear explanations, real-life examples, and mind-bending insights into how revolutions happen—not just in science, but in the way we think 🧠💡.✨ Perfect for students, thinkers, and the scientifically curious!
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
🎙️ New Podcast Episode: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot (2010) 🧬✨Get ready for a mind-blowing journey into science, ethics, and a story that changed medicine forever! 🔬💡 Henrietta Lacks, an African American woman from the 1950s, unknowingly became the foundation of groundbreaking medical research when her cells—known as HeLa cells—were taken without her consent. Her legacy has saved countless lives, but her own family was left in the dark for decades.In this episode, we dive deep into bioethics, medical racism, and the hidden human stories behind scientific breakthroughs. How did Henrietta’s cells revolutionize medicine? What rights do we have over our own biology? And how does her story still impact us today?Hit play now! 🎧🔥
HOSTED BY
Milad Pirasteh
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