当前位置: 首页 > 有机 >Impossible Dreams (by E. J. Corey) 和Corey的自传

Impossible Dreams (by E. J. Corey) 和Corey的自传

作者 gauss_ren
来源: 小木虫 500 10 举报帖子
+关注

在网上看到一个好帖,贴过来和大家分享
Impossible Dreams (by E. J. Corey)  

既然是做有机的, 就不能不提本领域内"活着的丰碑"--E.J.Corey, 这老先生是鼎鼎大名, 光荣事迹就轮不着我说了. 今天我选他2004年在JOC- Perspective上发表的文章---Impossible Dreams---(J. Org. Chem., 69 (9), 2917 -2919, 2004. 10.1021/jo049925d).

其实这篇文章在网上也见到有评价, 大体是说Corey自命不凡, 居然在JOC上给自己写自传. 我倒是觉得老爷子还是蛮可爱的, 在其他地方看到一些大牛把Angew.Chem.和JACS当成自己家的后花园撒泼吵架或者当成自家杂志写长篇小说连载.,觉得那境界也就彼此彼此吧.大家都是人,而且人家是化学界的名人, 也要允许显显摆嘛,不然一辈子混得什么劲儿. 他首先说小时候自己是波士顿红袜队的超级粉丝. 做了一辈子的球迷,终于有了回报. 十七年前孩提时代的英雄Ted Williams与他交谈共处了一个多小时. 然后谈到自己的不可能梦想. (插一句嘴, 我怎么老想着Impossible Mission呢) 我看完了这篇文章也没闹明白老爷子嘴里挂着的Impossible Dreams是什么东东, 难道是小时候琢磨的"电灯电话, 楼上楼下"?

下面是我的摘录:You will understand the title at one level by knowing that I have been a fan of the Boston Red Sox for about seventy years. This loyalty was partially rewarded about seventeen years ago when by chance I had the pleasure of spending an hour with my boyhood hero, Ted Williams. At about the time that I started to follow the Red Sox games by radio, I acquired the notion that I would like someday to know in detail how to build from scratch radios, planes, skyscrapers, bridges, and all the other objects of modern life. I sometimes wonder, in retrospect, whether this impossible dream somehow had an influence on the course of my life.

接着讲他在MIT的求学经历, 以及后来到Illinois谋得教职. 后来又到哈佛做教授.这些就省略了,反正大家有兴趣自己找来看就是,也不用我在这儿啰嗦. 我想说得就是文章的末段:

在倒数第三段里, Corey对化学界的年轻人做了"寄语":To them and to those starting careers in chemistry, I would offer the following advice: Never underestimate what you can accomplish if you prepare yourself well, continue to learn, work hard and optimistically, and value your integrity. 这一段话相当精彩, 反正我是把它做成自己的QQ签名了.




在Nicholau在Angew.Chem.上写的一篇全合成综述里提到一段话,我把它抄过来:Corey's contributions have turned the art of synthesis into a science....就是说Corey把有机合成艺术变成了一门科学. 正文的标题还有一句"Dedicated to Professor E. J. Corey for his outstanding contributions to organic synthesis".不光是做学问的,其实很多时候最重要的不是自己吹嘘自己多厉害, 同行的认可和尊重显得更为重要.  我等小辈在这个时候所能做的就是给予滔滔江水般景仰.


I am often asked about my vision for the future of chemistry, especially synthetic chemistry. As just stated, I believe that chemical synthesis will make enormous contributions to human progress in the next century especially when coupled to biology and medicine. However, those developments will not be fully realized without great and continuing advances in the central disciplines of chemistry. There is so much that remains to be discovered, in my opinion, that today's chemistry will seem archaic to a 22nd century chemist. I envy the young people in chemistry who will experience the excitement and pleasure of making the many discoveries of the next century of chemical research. Yet, at the same time, I worry about whether the younger generations of this country and the world will aspire to high creativity and persevere to achieve their impossible dreams.


在倒数第二段里,Corey提到自己经常被问到对有机合成化学的前景. 他讲道化学合成和生物及药物结合起来, 必定对人类的发展做出巨大贡献. 然而如果没有化学作为中心学科持续取得很大进展, 这些发展就无从谈起. 在他看来,仍然有许多有待探索的东东,今天的化学在未来22世纪看来可能就是archaic(古代的, 已经废弃的). 另外他很羡慕这个领域的年轻人etc....还有他担心下一代会不会有足够的抱负及高的创造力来坚持去实现他们自己的Impossible Dreams.....我觉得,他的意思是和"九斤老太"一样----担心一代不如一代, 一方面对新来的鼓励,另外也是吹捧自己吧,呵呵.
by 刘军涛 in 2007
原文:
http://www.fs2you.com/files/f7018763-5302-11dd-b0dd-0014221b798a/

[ Last edited by gauss_ren on 2008-7-16 at 14:51 ] 返回小木虫查看更多

今日热帖
  • 精华评论
  • gauss_ren

    My birth in July 1928 in Methuen, Massachusetts was followed just eighteen months later by the death of my father, Elias, a successful business man in that community 30 miles north of Boston. My mother, Fatina (née Hasham), changed my name from William to Elias shortly after my father's passing. I do not remember my father, but all his friends and associates made it clear that he was a remarkably gifted and much admired person. I have always been guided by a desire to be a worthy son to the father I cannot remember and to the loving, courageous mother who raised me, my brother, and two sisters through the trials of the Depression and World War II. My grandparents on both sides, who emigrated from Lebanon to the United States, also knew how to cope with adversity, as Christians in a tragically torn country, under the grip of the Ottoman empire.

    In 1931, our family grew to include my mother's sister, Naciby, and her husband, John Saba, who had no children of their own. We all lived together in a spacious house in Methuen, still a gathering place for family reunions. My uncle and aunt were like second parents to us. As a youngster I was rather independent, preferring such sports as football, baseball and hiking to work. However, when my aunt, who was much stricter than my mother, assigned a household chore, it had to be taken seriously. From her I learned to be efficient and to take pleasure in a job well done, no matter how mundane. We were a very close, happy and hardworking family with everything that we needed, despite the loss of my father and the hard economic times. Uncle John died in 1957, and too soon afterwards, in 1960, my aunt passed away. My mother died in 1970 at the age of seventy. They all lived to see each of the four children attain a measure of success.

    From the ages of five to twelve I attended the Saint Laurence O'Toole elementary school in Lawrence, a city next to Methuen, and was taught by sisters of the Catholic order of Notre Dame de Namour. I enjoyed all my subjects there. I do not remember ever learning any science, except for mathematics. I graduated from Lawrence Public High School at the age of sixteen and entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, just a few weeks later, in July, 1945, with excellent preparation, since most of my high school teachers had been dedicated and able. Although my favorite subject was mathematics, I had no plan for a career, except the notion that electronic engineering might be attractive, since it utilized mathematics at an interesting technological frontier. My first courses at M.I.T. were in the basic sciences: mathematics, physics and chemistry, all of which were wonderful. I became a convert to chemistry before even taking an engineering course because of the excellence and enthusiasm of my teachers, the central position of chemistry in the sciences and the joy of solving problems in the laboratory. Organic chemistry was especially fascinating with its intrinsic beauty and its great relevance to human health. I had many superb teachers at M.I.T., including Arthur C. Cope, John C. Sheehan, John D. Roberts and Charles Gardner Swain. I graduated from M.I.T. after three years and, at the suggestion of Professor Sheehan, continued there as a graduate member of his pioneering program on synthetic penicillins. My doctoral work was completed by the end of 1950 and, at the age of twenty-two, I joined the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as an Instructor in Chemistry under the distinguished chemists Roger Adams and Carl S. Marvel. I am forever grateful to them for giving me such a splendid opportunity, as well as for their help and friendship over many years.

    Because my interests in chemistry ranged from the theoretical and quantitative side to the biological end of the spectrum, I decided to maintain a broad program of teaching and research and to approach chemistry as a discipline without internal boundaries. My research in the first three years, which had to be done with my own hands and a few undergraduate students, was in physical organic chemistry. It had to do with the application of molecular orbital theory to the understanding of the transition states for various reactions in three dimensional (i.e. stereochemical) detail. The stereoelectronic ideas which emerged from this work are still widely used in chemistry and mechanistic enzymology. By 1954, as an Assistant Professor with a group of three graduate students, I was able to initiate more complex experimental projects, dealing with the structure, stereochemistry and synthesis of natural products. As a result of the success of this research, I was appointed in 1956, at age twenty-seven, as Professor of Chemistry. My research group grew and the scope of our work broadened to include other topics: enantioselective synthesis, metal complexes, new reactions for synthesis and enzyme chemistry. The pace of discovery accelerated.

    In the fall of 1957, I received a Guggenheim fellowship and my first sabbatical leave. It was divided between Harvard, to which I had been invited by the late Prof. Robert B. Woodward, and Europe. The last four months of 1957 would prove eventful. In September, shortly after the beginning of my stay at Harvard, my uncle John passed away. At least I had been lucky enough to have seen him just two days before. I was deeply affected by the loss of this fine and generous man whom I loved as a real father. In solitude and sadness I returned to my work and a very deep immersion in studies which proved to be pivotal to my future research. In early October several of the key ideas for a logical and general way of thinking about chemical synthesis came to me. The application of these insights led to rapid and unusual solutions to several specific synthetic problems of interest to me at the time. I showed one such plan (for the molecule longifolene) to R. B. Woodward and was pleased by his enthusiastic response. Later in 1957 I visited Switzerland, London and Lund, the last as a guest of Prof. Karl Sune Bergström. It was at Lund, in Bergström's Department, that I became intrigued by the prostaglandins. Our research in the mid 1960's led to the first chemical syntheses of prostaglandins and to involvement in the burgeoning field of eicosanoids ever since.

    In the spring of 1959 I received an offer of a Professorship at Harvard, which I accepted with alacrity since I wanted to be near my family and since the Chemistry Department at Harvard was unsurpassed. The Harvard faculty in 1959 included Paul D. Bartlett, Konrad Bloch, Louis F. Fieser, George B. Kistiakowski, E. G. Rochow, Frank H. Westheimer, E. B. Wilson and R. B. Woodward, all giants in the field of Chemistry. Roger Adams, who was always very kind and encouraging to me, gave his blessing even though years before he had declined a professorial appointment at Harvard. I have always regarded the offer of a Professorship at Harvard as the most gratifying of my professional honors.

    At Harvard my research group grew in size and quality, and developed a spirit and dynamism which has been a continuing delight to me. I was able to start many new scientific projects and to teach an advanced graduate course on chemical synthesis. Using the concepts of retrosynthetic analysis under guidance of broad strategies, first-year graduate students could be taught in just three months to design sophisticated chemical syntheses. My research interests soon evolved to include the following areas: synthesis of complex, bioactive molecules; the logic of chemical synthesis; new methods of synthesis; molecular catalysts and robots; theoretical organic chemistry and reaction mechanisms; organometallic chemistry; bioorganic and enzyme chemistry; prostaglandins and other eicosanoids and their relevance to medicine; application of computers to organic chemical problems, especially to retrosynthetic analysis. My personal scientific aspirations can be similarly summarized: to be creative over a broad range of the chemical sciences; to sustain that creativity over many years; to raise the power of research in chemistry to a qualitatively higher level; and to develop new generations of outstanding chemists.

    In September, 1961, I married Claire Higham, a graduate of the University of Illinois. We have three children. David Reid is a graduate of Harvard (A.B. 1985) and the University of California, Berkeley (Ph.D., 1990), who is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow in Chemistry/Molecular Biology at the University of California Medical School at San Francisco. Our second son, John, graduated from Harvard (A.B. 1987) and the Paris Conservatory of Music (1990) and is now carrying out advanced studies in classical music composition at the latter institution. Our daughter, Susan, graduated from Harvard with a major in anthropology (A.B. 1990) and plans graduate work in Education. Claire and I live near the Harvard Campus in Cambridge, as we have for nearly thirty years. My leisure interests include outdoor activities and music.

    I am very proud of the many graduate students and postdoctoral fellows from all over the world who have worked in my research group. Their discoveries in my laboratory and their subsequent achievements in science have been a source of enormous satisfaction. The Corey research family now includes about one hundred fifty university professors and an even larger number of research scientists in the pharmaceutical and chemical industry. It has been my good fortune to have been involved in the education of scholars and leaders in every area of chemical research, and especially, to have contributed to the scientific development of many different countries. My research family has been an extraordinarily important part of my life. Much of the credit for what I have achieved belongs to that professional family, my wonderful teachers and faculty colleagues, and not least, to my own dear personal family.


    This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above,

  • michaelyan

    EJ Corey...the ultimate master of total synthesis...the synthetic methodology culminates during his era...

  • James-CG

    Well written, very encouraging

  • ahfymgy

    好文!!!

  • rewot

    呵~看了标题,觉得很面熟。打开一看,原来楼主是从我的博客上转来的。欢迎转载,哈哈。我去年在科学网开的博客,本来想写些读文献的感受,但后来实验太忙。只写了几段文字。就没功夫去写了。这是我读JOC perspective里Corey一篇文章时的一些自己的感受。至于Corey文中的Impossible Dream究竟是什么呢?有个访客回复说:他小时候的梦想就是看到波士顿红袜队夺冠。

  • trixaypm

    哈哈,楼主转了版主的博文给版主兴奋坏了。。,明天我也转去。。。

猜你喜欢
应助之星
下载小木虫APP
与700万科研达人随时交流
  • 二维码
  • IOS
  • 安卓