On 17 June 2014, University Medical Center Mainz awarded Carl Djerassi (*29 October 1923 in Vienna, Austria, † 30 January 2015) an honorary doctorate. Carl Djerassi, a biochemist, inventor of the contraceptive pill, and man of letters, was particularly associated with the Institute of the History, Philosophy and Ethics of Medicine at the University Medical Center Mainz.
Carl Djerassi was an internationally renowned biochemist. He was instrumental in the development of the contraceptive pill and thus achieved a milestone in the history of medicine. For several decades he wrote literary works which portray the interfaces at which individuals, the life sciences, and biomedicine meet. In doing so, he opened up a new perspective on the reciprocal relationship between life and the life sciences.
Back in May 2005, he visited the Institute of the History, Philosophy and Ethics of Medicine at the University Medical Center Mainz and discussed the history, social perception and ethical dimension of reproductive medicine with doctoral candidates. The connection to the institute in Mainz arose thanks to a guest lectureship at Stanford University held by the current director of the Institute for History, Theory and Ethics of Medicine at the University Medical Center Mainz, Professor
Norbert W. Paul.About Carl Djerassi
Carl Djerassi was born in Vienna on 29 October 1923, the son of two Jewish physicians. He emigrated with his mother to escape Nazism to the United States, where, after attending school at Kenyon College and the University of Wisconsin, he completed his academic training with honors. Carl Djerassi was both a chemist and a writer of world renown. Luis E. Miramontes and Djerassi, as researchers for Syntex S.A. in Mexico City in the early 1950s, succeeded in artificially synthesizing the sex hormone norethisterone, a progestogen. Together with Gregory Pincus and John Rock, they developed this to create the first birth control pill in 1951. In his autobiography, he referred to himself as the “mother of the pill”, considering himself to be only the chemical inventor of the pill. Djerassi taught at Stanford University from 1959. As a scientist, he published 1200 papers.
In the mid-1980s, he started his career as a novelist, founding a new genre he referred to as “science-in-fiction” that resulted in his tetralogy Cantor’s Dilemma, The Bourbaki Gambit, Menachem’s Seed and NO. He also wrote dramas, notably Foreplay: Hannah Arendt, the Two Adornos and Walter Benjamin. The drama was published in book form in English, German, and Spanish.
This was not the sole connection between Carl Djerassi and the Rhine-Main region/Mainz. Back in 2005, he visited the University Medical Center Mainz and held a workshop, gave a public lecture, and presented a staged performance at the Institute of the History, Philosophy, and Ethics of Medicine in the Frankfurter Hof.
Carl Djerassi died on 30 January 2015 at his home in San Francisco at the age of 91 from complications of liver and bone cancer.