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Jacques Monod
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1965
Biography
Jacques
Monod Jacques Lucien Monod was born in Paris on February 9th, 1910. In
1917 his parents settled in the South of France, where Monod spent his
early years, and he therefore thinks of himself as a Southerner rather
than as a Parisian. His father was a painter, something of an unusual
vocation for a Huguenot family in which doctors, ministers of the
Church, civil servants, and professors predominated. His mother was
American, born in Milwaukee, with a father of Scottish descent - again
somewhat out of the ordinary considering French bourgeois tradition at
the end of the nineteenth century. His secondary education took place
at the lycée de Cannes, and he owes a great deal to some of the
masters under whom he was fortunate enough to study. Monod in
particular recalls Monsieur Dor de la Souchère, well known as
the founder and curator of the Antibes museum. Although Monod remembers
nothing of the Greek grammar studied under him, the admiration which he
soon developed for this highly cultured and worthy man was of the
greatest spiritual benefit for him as a youngster. It is difficult to
express just how much Monod owes to his father, who combined artistic
sensitivity with prodigious erudition and a passionate concern for
intellectual affairs. He had a positivist faith in the joint progress
of science and society. It was through his father, who used to read
Darwin, that Jacques Monod developed his interest in biology very early
in life.
Monod came to Paris in 1928 to begin his higher
education, and registered at the Faculty for a degree in Natural
Sciences, not realising (as he later found out) that this course was
then some twenty years or more behind contemporary biological science.
It was from others, a few years senior to himself, rather than from the
professional staff, that he gained his true initiation into biology. To
George Teissier he owes a preference for quantitative descriptions;
André Lwoff initiated him into the potentials of microbiology;
to Boris Ephrussi he owes the discovery of physiological genetics, and
to Louis Rapkine the concept that only chemical and molecular
descriptions could provide a complete interpretation of the function of
living organisms.
Monod obtained his Science Degree in 1931,
and his doctorate in Natural Sciences in 1941. After lecturing at the
Faculty of Sciences in 1934, and spending some time at the California
Institute of Technology on a Rockefeller grant in 1936, Monod joined
the Institut Pasteur after the liberation as Laboratory Director in
Lwoff's Department. He was made Director of the Cell Biochemistry
Department in 1954, and in 1959 was appointed Professor of the
Chemistry of Metabolism at the Sorbonne. In 1967 he became Professor at
the Collège de France, and in 1971 he was appointed Director of
the Institut Pasteur.
The following honours and distinctions
were awarded to Professor Monod: Montyon Physiology Prize of the
Acadèmie des Sciences (Paris, 1955), Louis Rapkine Medal
(London, 1958), Honorary Foreign Member of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences (1960), Chevalier de l'Ordre des Palmes Académiques
(1961), Charles Léopold Mayer Prize of the Académie des
Sciences (1962), Officier de la Légion d'Honneur (1963),
Honorary Foreign Member of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher
«Leopoldina» (1965), D. Sc. h. c. University of Chicago
(1965), Foreign Member of the Royal Society (1968 ), Foreign Member of
the National Academy of Sciences (Washington, 1968), Foreign Member of
the American Philosophical Society (1969), D. Sc. h. c. of the
Rockefeller University (1970). His military distinctions include:
Honorary Colonel of the Reserve, Chevalier de la Légion
d'Honneur (military) (1945), Croix de Guerre (1945), and the Bronze
Star Medal.
In 1938, Jacques Monod married Odette Bruhl, now
the curator of the Guimet Museum. As an archeologist and orientalist
with the most sensitive and impeccable taste, his wife brought to the
marriage a culture complementary to his own. They have twin sons,
Olivier and Philippe. Their father did nothing to influence them to
become men of science like himself. On the contrary, he made every
effort to persuade them that the realm of knowledge and ideas is not
confined to the present-day connotation of the word
«science». Both of them nevertheless became scientists: one
a geologist, the other a physicist. These two sons gave the parents
what they lacked before: two daughters, or rather daughters-in-law, and
even a grand-daughter with the pretty name of Claire. The interests of
Jacques Monod include almost all aspects of Arts and Sciences, his
favourite recreations are music and sailing.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This
autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first
published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and
republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the
source as shown above.
Jacques Monod died on May 31, 1976.