Andrew Berry (biologist)

Andrew Berry (born 1963) is a British evolutionary biologist and historian of science with a particular interest in Alfred Russel Wallace. He was a Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows and is currently a lecturer in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University.[1] His research combined field and laboratory methods to detect positive Darwinian selection (i.e. adaptive evolution) at the molecular level in natural populations. In addition to technical articles, he has published in the London Review of Books,[2][3][4] Slate,[5][6] and elsewhere. He has published two books: Infinite tropics: an Alfred Russel Wallace anthology, 2003, with a foreword written by Stephen Jay Gould,[7] and DNA: The Secret of Life with James Watson, 2003.[8] In addition to lecturing at Harvard, he also leads a Harvard Summer Study Abroad program at Queen's College, Oxford on the history of evolutionary biology and on current ideas in the field.[9] He teaches evolutionary biology regularly at Sabancı University in Istanbul, Turkey, and is accordingly targeted by Turkish creationist organizations.[10]

Andrew Berry speaking at MIT on Darwin Day 2019

Andrew Berry
Born (1963-07-11) July 11, 1963
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Oxford, Princeton University
Known forAlfred Wallace history
Scientific career
FieldsGenetics, History of Science
InstitutionsHarvard University

Berry has worked on the script development for several major TV shows: Race, the Power of an Illusion in 2003 by PBS,[11] the 5-part Channel 4 DNA,[12] and NOVA's Lord of the Ants.[13] In 2013, along with George Beccaloni, curator with a special interest in Orthopteroidea and the Alfred Russel Wallace collections at the Natural History Museum, London, Berry narrated a short animated film for The New York Times to celebrate the Alfred Russel Wallace's centenary.[14]

Personal background and education

Andrew Berry was born in 1963 in London. His father is biologist R. J. Berry. He was educated at Shrewsbury School and then studied Zoology at St John's College, Oxford. He did his PhD under Martin Kreitman in evolutionary genetics at Princeton University.[12] At Harvard, he did post-doctoral work in Richard Lewontin's lab. He is married to Harvard Professor Naomi Pierce, and they have twin daughters named Megan and Katie.

gollark: I spent a while rephrasing this, but whatever: ultimately, the stupid persuasive things politicians go around doing to get votes *do work* on people.
gollark: I mean, this looks like partly blaming issues with democracy on markets on the somewhat-biased-media thing.
gollark: Wait, you sort of did though.> effective democracy and market systems require rational operation of the general population. this rational operation is inhibited via a mechanism known as "manufacturing consent"
gollark: I see.
gollark: Blaming basically every issue on that seems a stretch.

References

  1. "Harvard Profiles". Harvard University.
  2. "London Review of Books". An Ugly Baby: Alfred Russel Wallace. London Review of Books.
  3. "London Review of Books". Data Guy: Charles Darwin. London Review of Books.
  4. "London Review of Books". W D Hamilton. London Review of Books.
  5. "Slate". Dolly the Cloned Sheep. Slate.
  6. "Slate". The Olympic Gene Pool. Slate.
  7. Alfred Russel Wallace; Andrew Berry; Stephen Jay Gould (2003). Infinite tropics: an Alfred Russel Wallace anthology. Verso.
  8. Berry, Andrew (2008). DNA: The Secret of Life. Paw Prints.
  9. "Oxford, England". Harvard Summer School. Harvard Summer School.
  10. "Harun Yahya". Pagan American Priest Importing Darwinism to Turkey. Harun Yahya.
  11. "PBS credits". Credits. PBS.
  12. "Harvard". Harvard University. Archived from the original on 4 August 2003.
  13. "TV program credits". TV program credits. PBS.
  14. Litchman, Flora; Sharon Shattuck (4 November 2013). "The Animated Life of A.R. Wallace". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 November 2013.


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