1. Muller misled the Pugwash Conference on radiation risks.
- Author
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Calabrese, Edward J. and Selby, Paul B.
- Subjects
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RADIOLOGICAL health risk , *HEALTH policy , *CARCINOGENS , *HUMAN genome , *AWARDS , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *RADIATION , *FRAUD in science , *WORLD health , *NUCLEAR energy , *ENVIRONMENTAL health , *DOSE-response relationship (Radiation) , *RISK assessment , *HEALTH , *INTERNATIONAL agencies , *RADIATION injuries , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
The Pugwash Conferences have been a highly visible attempt to create profoundly important discussions on matters related to global safety and security at the highest levels, starting in 1957 at the height of the Cold War. This paper assesses, for the first time, the formal comments offered at this first Pugwash Conference by the Nobel Prize-winning radiation geneticist, Hermann J. Muller, on the effects of ionizing radiation on the human genome. This analysis shows that the presentation by Muller was highly biased and contained scientific errors and misrepresentations of the scientific record that resulted in seriously misleading the attendees. The presentation of Muller at Pugwash served to promote, on a very visible global scale, continued misrepresentations of the state of the science and had a significant impact on policies and practices internationally and both scientific and personal belief systems concerning the effects of low dose radiation on human health. These misrepresentations would come to affect the adoption and use of nuclear technologies and the science of radiological and chemical carcinogen health risk assessment, ultimately having a profound effect on global environmental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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