• Boneheads and Brainiacs: Heroes and Scoundrels of the Nobel Prize in Medicine

  • By: Moira Dolan MD
  • Narrated by: David Sweeney-Bear
  • Length: 8 hrs and 48 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (10 ratings)

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Boneheads and Brainiacs: Heroes and Scoundrels of the Nobel Prize in Medicine

By: Moira Dolan MD
Narrated by: David Sweeney-Bear
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Publisher's summary

Even the greatest minds in medicine have been terribly, terribly wrong.

The inventor of the lobotomy won a Nobel prize in medicine for destroying his patients' brains. Another Nobel laureate thought malaria cured syphilis. The discoverer of anaphylactic shock also researched the spirit world and ESP. A pioneer of organ transplants was an ardent eugenicist, while the founder of sports physiology heroically spoke out against Nazism.

Boneheads and Brainiacs profiles the winners of the Nobel Prize in Medicine from 1901 to 1950 - a surprisingly diverse group of racists, cranks, and opportunists, as well as heroes, geniuses, and selfless benefactors of humanity. Forget all the ivory tower stereotypes of white-coated doctors finding miracle cures. Boneheads and Brainiacs reveals the messy human reality behind medical progress, in a highly entertaining audiobook for the ordinary listener.

Some were bad scientists; others were great scientists and lousy human beings. But the majority of these researchers produced knowledge that now saves millions of lives - priceless discoveries like the role of vitamins in nutrition, the dangers of radiation, treatments for diabetes and deadly infectious diseases, and more. Boneheads and Brainiacs showcases the enthralling, all-too-human personal lives that made modern medicine possible.

©2020 Linden Publishing (P)2020 Moira Dolan

What listeners say about Boneheads and Brainiacs: Heroes and Scoundrels of the Nobel Prize in Medicine

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Riveting!

I had no idea the Nobel prize had such checkered past. I knew of Nobel and the munitions empire but never suspected that the winners were so tainted by greed and ignorance. And the judges, almost worse than the winners! quite amazing.

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Outstanding

Extremely pleasant reading not only insightful and educational but highly entertaining, it was difficult to put down, only sorry it ended.

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Fascinating dive into the history of medicine

Each chapter covers a year and who won the prize that year. It is meticulously researched, often funny, often horrifying. Will people in a hundred years think our current medicine is both barbarous and prescient? I think so. Great read!

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