This page collects transcripts of several interviews given by Joshua Lederberg between 1956 and 1998. It is instructive to read how Joshua Lederberg's portrayal of the facts, changes as time passes.
What these four interviews show is that as time progressed, Joshua Lederberg progressively de-emphasized the research work that Esther M. Lederberg did, and progressively claimed her work as his own. He further obscured (misinformed) people by conflating plasmids with episomes, fertility factor "F" with bacteriophage lambda, etc. Finally, references to papers are never provided, thus when there might be multiple authors including Joshua Lederberg, or even when Joshua Lederberg was NEVER an author, he made it appear as if the discoveries (papers) were soley his work. This is reinforced by the claim on his NLM "Profiles in Science" website that between 1946 and 1952 he "almost single-handedly reshaped the field of bacterial genetics".1
Joshua Lederberg further writes that he misappropriated research correspondence that did not belong to him, and when asked to return it to its rightful owner, said that the correspondence had been donated unconditionally to Stanford University. (The result of this act was to bury the documentation where it could not be easily accessed by others.) Compare this with Joahua Lederberg's words at the Madison Wisconsin, 1958 Press Conference where he reacted to being a co-recipient of the Nobel Prize for Medicine or Physiology:
"Well, I think the first thing I'd want to not just say but stress, is the cooperative nature of research these days. By this I mean not so much the fact that we work in teams in a single laboratory, although this is more and more true with the growing complexity of scientific work, but rather the mutual dependence of work that goes on in one laboratory; on the contributions that are made throughout the world. From this point of view, the Nobel awards, by focusing as they do so vehemently on individual accomplishments, fall short, I think, of creating the most accurate picture of the nature of scientific work as it goes on today. This — I wouldn't want to demean the contributions that Beadle and Tatum have made as individuals and my own work has followed very directly from the paths which they blazed — but beyond them there are dozens or hundreds of other workers who are putting the bricks into place for the development of the structure. This is true as to various degrees of relationships between one laboratory and another."
1 As the false claims of the NLM are discovered, the NLM is attempting to erase the record of these errors. However, this website continues maintain a record of the false claims made by the NLM.
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