
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book: Crick , Francis (1990-07-10), What Mad Pursuit, Basic Books (AZ), Retrieved on 2012-03-17Source Material [books.google.com]
Folksonomies: biography autobiography Memes
17 MAR 2012
Chance Favors, but Ambition is Crucial
The major credit I think Jim and I deserve ... is for selecting the right problem and sticking to it. It's true that by blundering about we stumbled on gold, but the fact remains that we were looking for gold. Both of us had decided, quite independently of each other, that the central problem in molecular biology was the chemical structure of the gene. ... We could not see what the answer was, but we considered it so important that we were determined to think about it long and hard, from any ...Folksonomies: discovery
Folksonomies: discovery
Francis Crick admits his discovery was something of chance, but emphasizes the fact that he was looking for the discovery in the first place and willing to dedicate a great deal of time to it.
17 MAR 2012
Evolution Can Only Build on What is Already There
To produce a really good biological theory one must try to see through the clutter produced by evolution to the basic mechanisms lying beneath them, realizing that they are likely to be overlaid by other, secondary mechanisms. What seems to physicists to be a hopelessly complicated process may have been what nature found simplest, because nature could only build on what was already there. Folksonomies: evolution vestigial traits
Folksonomies: evolution vestigial traits
Crick describing the clutter of nature.