Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Beadle , George Wells (1959), The place of genetics in modern biology, Retrieved on 2012-01-04
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  • Folksonomies: science

    Memes

    04 JAN 2012

     Organic Chemists Merely Increase the Probability of Results

    It is, I believe, justifiable to make the generalization that anything an organic chemist can synthesize can be made without him. All he does is increase the probability that given reactions will 'go.' So it is quite reasonable to assume that given sufficient time and proper conditions, nucleotides, amino acids, proteins, and nucleic acids will arise by reactions that, though less probable, are as inevitable as those by which the organic chemist fulfills his predictions. So why not self-dupli...
      1  notes

    In nature, with enough time and proper conditions, the results would happen eventually without him, including self-duplicating molecular systems like viruses.

    04 JAN 2012

     Genetics Gives Us New Powers, but Society Must Decide Whe...

    Knowing what we now know about living systems—how they replicate and how they mutate—we are beginning to know how to control their evolutionary futures. To a considerable extent we now do that with the plants we cultivate and the animals we domesticate. This is, in fact, a standard application of genetics today. We could even go further, for there is no reason why we cannot in the same way direct our own evolutionary futures. I wish to emphasize, however—and emphatically—that whether ...
    Folksonomies: genetics gmo eugenics
    Folksonomies: genetics gmo eugenics
      1  notes

    We currently use genetics in the domestication of animals and crops, but whether it is ethical to go further with it, altering the genes of organisms, even ourselves, is up to society to decide.

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