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Broken genius : the rise and fall of William Shockley, creator of the electronic age

Part of the Macmillan Science series
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"Broken Genius" is the first biography of William Shockley, founding father of Silicon Valley - one of the most significant and reviled scientists of the Twentieth century.

Shockley won a Nobel Prize for inventing the transistor, upon which almost everything that makes the modern world is based.

Little has affected history as much as this device, developed along with John Bardeen and Walter Brattain at AT&T's Bell Telephone Laboratories in the mid-1940s.

He then recruited the best 8 young semiconductor scientists in the world to found the first company in Silicon Valley.

A year later, because of his impossibly controlling management, these men resigned en masse to found INTEL together and thereby became billionaires.

But William Shockley is remembered more for one of the most vicious controversies in modern science.

His campaigning about race, intelligence and genetics saw him donating to the Nobel Prize sperm bank, being vilified on national TV and ultimately destroyed his reputation.

Drawing upon unique access to the colossal private Shockley archives, veteran technology historian and journalist Joel Shurkin gives an unflinching account of how such promise ended in such ignominy.

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Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
1403988153 / 9781403988157
Hardback
13/06/2006
United States
English
ix, 297 p. : ill.
24 cm
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