Science Friction
ABC listen
Science Friction's latest season is: Artificial Evolution. In 1996, Dolly the Sheep became the first ever cloned animal. Nearly 30 years later, genetic technology has reshaped the world around us. What exactly has happened, where are we headed, and are we OK about it? In this series, environment reporter Peter de Kruijff tells the surprising stories of genetic engineering. Meet the scientists changing the food we eat and creating animals with organs we can use. Hear about the criminal conspiracy to clone a giant sheep, and the teams bringing extinct animals back from the dead. Artificial Evolution traces the influence of genetic technology from Dolly into the future. It’s the latest series of Science Friction, an award-winning podcast from ABC Radio National. Brain Rot (Season 3): How does being chronically online affect our brains? Technology reporter Ange Lavoipierre explores the wildest ways people are using tech — from falling in love with AI companions to data-dumping a life into a language model — and the big questions about our own screen use. Cooked (Season 2): Why do some studies show ice cream is good for you? Why do some people say they feel good going carnivore, and do we really need as many electrolytes as the internet tells us? Food and nutrition scientist Dr Emma Beckett cuts through these confusing findings to explain how nutrition science works. AI Overlords (Season 1): AI didn't come from nowhere, and its development hasn't been a smooth, straight line — it's been rife with drama, conflict and disagreement. Technology reporter James Purtill looks at where AI came from, who controls it and where it's heading.
Categories: Science & Medicine
Listen to the last episode:
In 2018, a Chinese scientist made an announcement that shocked the world — and landed him years in prison. In a special episode of Artificial Evolution, Health Report reporter Shelby Traynor traces the story of He Jiankui, the researcher who helped to produce genetically edited babies. His actions invited condemnation from scientists worldwide and opened new fronts of scientific and ethical debate. Thank you to the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for supplying the baby KJ audio, and Genepool Productions for supplying the citizen's jury audio used in this episode. You can hear more episodes of Science Friction with journalist Peter de Kruijff about DNA, cloning, genetic modification and gene editing on the ABC listen app (Australia) or wherever you get your podcasts. Reporter: Shelby Traynor Presenter: Peter de Kruijff Producers: Shelby Traynor, Fiona Pepper Senior Producer: James Bullen Sound Engineer: Roi Huberman This story was made on the lands of the Gadigal, Whadjuk Noongar and Menang Noongar peoples.
Previous episodes
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672 - 05 | Artificial Evolution: Gene-Edited Babies Wed, 08 Oct 2025
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671 - A story of hope: How Jane Goodall changed the world Thu, 02 Oct 2025
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670 - 04 | Artificial Evolution: Pig Parts for People? Wed, 24 Sep 2025
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669 - 03 | Artificial Evolution: Yuck or Yum? Gene-Edited Meat Wed, 17 Sep 2025
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668 - 02 | Artificial Evolution: Genetically Modified Marsupials Wed, 10 Sep 2025
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667 - 01 | Artificial Evolution: Cloning Goes Mainstream Wed, 03 Sep 2025
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666 - INTRODUCING — Artificial Evolution Fri, 22 Aug 2025
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665 - 05 | Brain Rot: Meet the people who ditched their smartphones. Is it worth it? Wed, 02 Jul 2025
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664 - 04 | Brain Rot: Is internet addiction real? Wed, 25 Jun 2025
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663 - 03 | Brain Rot: Is tech making your memory better or worse? Wed, 18 Jun 2025
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662 - 02 | Brain Rot: Is AI turning us off human relationships? Wed, 11 Jun 2025
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661 - 01 | Brain Rot: Is there any proof your phone is destroying your attention span? Wed, 04 Jun 2025
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660 - INTRODUCING — Brain Rot Wed, 28 May 2025
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659 - 06 | Cooked: Vitamin B3 ... and the media Wed, 05 Mar 2025
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658 - 05 | Cooked: Electrolytes — who needs them? Wed, 26 Feb 2025
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657 - 04 | Cooked: A peculiar potato experiment Wed, 19 Feb 2025
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656 - The Anthropocene radical: the scientist who saved the world (REPEAT) Sun, 23 Jan 2022
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655 - The virus busters: how do you kill something that's not really alive? Sun, 05 Sep 2021
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654 - 03 | Cooked: Mystery in the Mediterranean Wed, 12 Feb 2025
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653 - 02 | Cooked: All-meat eaters say they feel great - but why? Wed, 05 Feb 2025
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652 - 01 | Cooked: Could ice cream actually be good for you? Wed, 29 Jan 2025
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651 - 00 | INTRODUCING — Cooked Tue, 28 Jan 2025
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650 - 06 | Is super-intelligent AI around the corner? Wed, 29 Nov 2023
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649 - 05 | The year the world woke up to AI with a bang Wed, 22 Nov 2023
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648 - 04 | If you control AI, you control the world Wed, 15 Nov 2023
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647 - 03 | The bumpy history of driverless cars and their AI brains Wed, 08 Nov 2023
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646 - 02 | Locked up by AI for a crime he didn't commit Wed, 01 Nov 2023
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645 - 01 | The day modern AI toppled humanity's champion Wed, 25 Oct 2023
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644 - I for one welcome... Hello AI Overlords! Mon, 23 Oct 2023
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643 - REAL WILD CHILD (Part 4) — The Lost Boys Fri, 19 May 2023
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642 - What family secrets hide inside your cells? Epigenetics, trauma, and ancestry Fri, 12 May 2023
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641 - Robbie and the DNA Detectives Fri, 05 May 2023
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640 - REAL WILD CHILD (Part 3) — The superstar of Tai Asks Why Fri, 28 Apr 2023
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639 - REAL WILD CHILD (Part 2) — I grew up in a cult Sun, 23 Apr 2023
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638 - REAL WILD CHILD (Part 1) — The nuclear boy scouts Fri, 14 Apr 2023
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637 - Thanks for the fun! Science Friction's Natasha Mitchell has some news Mon, 10 Apr 2023
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636 - The fantastical world of fusion – The Expanse's Ty Franck and futurist Karl Schroeder (Part 2) Thu, 06 Apr 2023
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635 - Nuclear disruption — will starry-eyed startups win the nuclear fusion race? (Part 1) Fri, 31 Mar 2023
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634 - The unexpected lives of Lab Shenanigans and The Scholar Diaries Sat, 25 Mar 2023
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633 - Out of jail, is the CRISPR-baby scandal scientist at it again? Fri, 17 Mar 2023
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632 - Science is political — Australia's science minister Ed Husic Fri, 10 Mar 2023
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631 - Quantum bullsh*t — how (not) to ruin your life with advice from quantum physics Fri, 03 Mar 2023
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630 - We're here, we're queer, and omg science! Fri, 24 Feb 2023
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629 - World Pride 2023 - Love Your Nature Fri, 17 Feb 2023
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628 - Rock celebrity! The big bucks and wild geopolitics of meteorites - Part 2 Fri, 10 Feb 2023
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627 - Rock celebrity! The Black Beauty saga - Part 1 Fri, 03 Feb 2023
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626 - Gene edited foods back on the menu - what are they and what's changed? (REPEAT) Fri, 27 Jan 2023
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625 - Twinning! (REPEAT) Sun, 22 Jan 2023
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624 - Escaping Russia's new Iron Curtain — superstar science podcaster Ilya Kolmanovsky (REPEAT) Sun, 15 Jan 2023
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623 - AI ethics leader Timnit Gebru is changing it up after Google fired her (REPEAT) Sun, 08 Jan 2023