John Rock (American scientist)

John Rock (American scientist)

Infobox Scientist
name = John Rock
box_width =


image_width =150px
caption = John Rock
birth_date = 24 March 1890
birth_place =
death_date = 4 December 1984
death_place =
residence =
citizenship =
nationality =
ethnicity =
field =
work_institutions =
alma_mater =
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for = birth control pill
author_abbrev_bot =
author_abbrev_zoo =
influences =
influenced =
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =

John Rock (24 March 1890 - 4 December 1984) was one of the inventors of the birth control pill. He had five children and nineteen grandchildren, and regularly attended Catholic mass.

In the years immediately after the Pill was approved by the F.D.A., in 1960, Rock was everywhere. He appeared in interviews and documentaries on CBS and NBC, in "Time Magazine", "Newsweek", "Life Magazine", and The "Saturday Evening Post". He toured the country tirelessly. He wrote a widely discussed book, "The Time Has Come: A Catholic Doctor's Proposals to End the Battle Over Birth Control," which was translated into French, German, and Dutch.

At Harvard Medical School, he taught obstetrics and gynecology for more than three decades. In the nineteen-thirties, at the Free Hospital for Women in Brookline, Massachusetts, he had started the country's first clinic for educating Catholic couples in calendar-based methods of birth control. He was a pioneer in in-vitro fertilization and the freezing of sperm cells, and was the first to extract an intact fertilized egg. The Pill was his crowning achievement. His two collaborators, Gregory Pincus and Min- Cheuh Chang, worked out the mechanism. He shepherded the drug through its clinical trials.

John Rock believed the Catholic Church would approve use of the birth control pill, and based his position on the 1951 acceptance of the rhythm method by Pope Pius XII. The reasoning given by the pope was that the Rhythm Method did not kill the sperm, like a spermicide, or frustrate the normal process of procreation, like a diaphragm, or mutilate the organs, like sterilization. John Rock believed that the pill should be considered a natural method of birth control. The pill in part suppressed ovulation with progesterone, the same way a woman's body suppresses ovulation during pregnancy. And it did not kill sperm, mutilate organs, or involve a physical barrier in the reproductive tract.

In 1958, Pope Pius XII approved the Pill for Catholics, so long as its contraceptive effects were "indirect"--that is, so long as it was intended only as a remedy for conditions like painful menses or "a disease of the uterus." Rock advocated use of the pill for irregular menstrual cycles, which would have made it a moral birth control for women who would have had difficulty using the Rhythm Method. This reasoning was part of the motivation for choosing a four-week cycle for packaging the pill: if an obviously artificial length had been selected, it would have hurt his moral argument that the pill "regulated" the menstrual cycle.

Rock was profoundly disappointed by the 1968 release of the encyclical "Humanae Vitae", which categorized oral contraceptives as immoral along with all other artificial methods of birth control.

References

*cite journal | last = Gladwell | first = Malcolm | title = John Rock's Error | journal = The New Yorker | date = 2000-03-10 | url= http://www.gladwell.com/2000/2000_03_10_a_rock.htm | accessdate=2007-06-17
**an advertorial by journalist Malcolm Gladwell for [http://www.balancepharm.com Balance Pharmaceuticals, Inc.]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • John Rock — may refer to:*John Rock (American scientist) *John Rock (Abolitionist) *John Rock (ASUI Senator) …   Wikipedia

  • Rock — Rock(s) may refer to: * Rock (geology), a mineral substance * Rock music, a form of popular musicPlaces* Rock, Cornwall, a village in Kernow (Cornwall) * Rock, Worcestershire, a village in Worcestershire, UK * Rock, Kansas, an unincorporated… …   Wikipedia

  • John Cleese — Cleese in 2008 Birth name John Marwood Cleese Born 27 October 1939 (1939 10 27) …   Wikipedia

  • John Adams (composer) — John Coolidge Adams (born February 15, 1947) is an American composer with strong roots in minimalism. He is best known for his opera Nixon in China (1985 ndash;87), recounting Richard Nixon s 1972 visit to China. His choral piece On the… …   Wikipedia

  • John Anderson — may refer to:Science:* John H. D. Anderson (1726 ndash;1796), Scottish natural philosopher * John Anderson (zoologist) (1833 ndash;1900), Scottish zoologist * John August Anderson (1876 ndash;1959), American physicist and astronomer * John… …   Wikipedia

  • John D. Hamaker — (1914–1994), was an American mechanical engineer, ecologist, agronomist and science writer in the fields of soil remineralization, rock dusting, mineral cycles, climate cycles and glaciology. Contents 1 Biography 2 Discoveries inventions 3… …   Wikipedia

  • American Idol (season 9) — American Idol Season 9 Broadcast from January 12, 2010–May 26, 2010 Judges Simon Cowell Ellen DeGeneres Kara DioGuardi Randy Jackson Host(s) Ryan Seacrest …   Wikipedia

  • American lobster — Temporal range: Pleistocene–Recent …   Wikipedia

  • John Marshall High School (Los Angeles, California) — John Marshall High School Location 3939 Tracy Street Los Angeles, California  United States …   Wikipedia

  • John Long — is the name of:* John Long (politician) (c. 1419–1478), English Member of Parliament * John Long (basketball) (b. 1956), NBA player * John Long (NC politician) (1785–1857), U.S. Representative from North Carolina * John Long (climber) (b. 1953),… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”