Following a Fellowship at
New College, Oxford, and a
Medical Research Council research post, he was appointed to the professorship of biology at the newly instituted Open University in 1969. At the time he was Britain's youngest full professor and chair of the department. At the Open University he established the Brain Research Group, within which he and his colleagues investigated the biological processes involved in
memory formation and treatments for
Alzheimer's disease on which he published some 300 research papers and reviews. He wrote several
popular science books and regularly wrote for
The Guardian newspaper and the
London Review of Books. From 1999 to 2002, he gave public lectures as a professor of Physick (Genetics and Society) with his wife, the feminist sociologist
Hilary Rose at
Gresham College, London. His work won him numerous medals and prizes including the
Biochemical Society medal for communication in science and the prestigious
Edinburgh Medal in 2004. His book
The Making of Memory won the
Rhone-Poulenc Science Book Prize in 1993. In 2012 the
British Neuroscience Association gave him a lifetime award for "Outstanding contributions to neuroscience." Together with Hilary Rose he was a founder member of the
British Society for Social Responsibility in Science in the 1960s, and more recently they have been instrumental in
calling for a boycott of Israeli academic institutions for as long as Israel continues its
occupation of the Palestinian Territories, on the grounds of Israeli academics' close relationship with the
IDF. An open letter initiated by Steven and Hilary Rose, and also signed by 123 other academics was published in
The Guardian on 6 April 2002. In 2004 Hilary Rose and he were the founding members of the
British Committee for the Universities of Palestine. Rose was for several years a regular panellist on
BBC Radio 4's ethics debating series
The Moral Maze. His recent books with Hilary Rose include
Alas Poor Darwin: Arguments against Evolutionary Psychology, in 2012,
Genes, Cells and Brains: the Promethean promises of the new biology (Verso), described by
Guardian reviewer
Steven Poole as "fascinating, lucid and angry" with a "lethally impressive hit ratio", and most recently
Can Neuroscience Change Our Minds? (Polity, 2016). His audio-autobiography forms part of the
British Library's National Life Stories Collection of distinguished scientists. The sociologist
Nikolas Rose is his younger brother. Hilary and he had two sons. He remained an atheist. == Critique of genetic determinism ==