Paul Ehrlich

NOUN
  1. German bacteriologist who found a `magic bullet' to cure syphilis and was a pioneer in the study of immunology (1854-1915)
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How To Use Paul Ehrlich In A Sentence

  • Paul Ehrlich at Frankfurt started his studies on the therapeutic value of organic arsenic compounds in September 1906.
  • Additionally, as previously mentioned, in 1909, the German scientist Paul Ehrlich discovered arsphenamine, a drug that was marketed under the name of salvarsan. Syphilis from 1880 to 1920: A Public Health Nightmare and the First Challenge to Medical Ethics
  • Paul Ehrlich improved on Koch's staining procedure, using aniline instead of ammonia and fuchsin instead of methylene blue.
  • Paul Ehrlich sees coevolution pushing two competitors into " obligate cooperation.
  • Often these well-meaning folk were what I would describe as Malthusian Social Darwinists for whom Garrett Hardin's 'lifeboat ethic' was gospel the very same folks who are regressive and simple minded in the Sierra Club when it comes to immigration and population issues; Paul Ehrlich's work looms large here too. Governing the Eco-Commons
  • In a landmark 1970s study, Paul Ehrlich and others described the relationship formulaically as IPAT Impact = Population × Affluence × Technology; see www.stirpat.org. When a Billion Chinese Jump
  • This led in 1980 to a bet between a prominent ecologist, Paul Ehrlich, author of "The Population Bomb", and Julian Simon, an economist at the Cato Institute, a free market think-tank.
  • Earlier prize winners include the biologist Edward O. Wilson, the primatologist Jane Goodall and conservation biologist Paul Ehrlich.
  • Paul Ehrlich (1854 – 1915) was born near Breslau — then in Germany, but now known as Wroclaw, Poland — and studied to become a medical doctor at the university there and in Strasbourg, Freiburg im Breisgau, and Leipzig. Ehrlich, Paul
  • Paul Ehrlich, the German doctor who came up with this theory, had just been born when Perkin invented mauveine, but by the time he was a teenager, he had been captivated by—some said obsessed with—synthetic dyes of all colors. MANUFACTURING DEPRESSION
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