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Related: About this forumThe gay, Jewish scientist the Nazis left alone
The scientist Otto Warburg played a pivotal role in unlocking a central mystery of cancer. But how he was allowed to advance our understanding of the disease is a mystery unto itself. At the time of Hitlers ascent, when his colleagues fled en masse or were stripped of their positions, Warburg, a gay man from one of Germanys most prominent Jewish families, operated his own institute with the Nazis knowing consent.
His survival could be chalked up in part to self-conceit.
Whether Warburg was the greatest biochemist of the era is debatable, but he was almost certainly the most self-important biochemist who ever lived, Sam Apple writes in his new book, Ravenous: Otto Warburg, the Nazis, and the Search for the Cancer-Diet Connection.
Warburg was a brilliant researcher, a Nobel laureate who discovered that cancer cells gorge on blood sugar and ferment their food in a way healthy cells with plenty of oxygen dont. Warburg was also the sort of man who, when asked to provide a certificate of Aryan descent, refused both to comply and to return a Nazi salute. He likewise refused to hang Nazi banners in his lab.
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LifeLongDemocratic
(131 posts)I wonder if they would have spared Einstein if he had stayed in Europe?
SpankMe
(3,368 posts)Science - over the last 15 years or so - is really coming around to the connection between cancer and sugar. It's interesting that this was proposed almost a century ago by Warburg, was de-emphasized by science after WW2, and is now re-emerging.
The medical community at large seems reluctant to look closely at diet as a prevention or treatment for disease. It's always about the drugs. There are exceptions. But, they'd still rather pump you up with Metformin instead of tell you to cut carbs.