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The Scientist: NewsBlog:
The poetryome
Posted by Jef Akst [Entry posted at 23rd July 2009 05:17 PM GMT]
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A Paper Clip of Zygotic DNA by D REID WISEMAN [Comment posted 2009-07-31 14:02:52] During the fusion of our parent's gametes in the upper or lower reaches of either the left or right Fallopian tube of our mothers, 6 trillionths of a gram of nuclear, zygotic DNA unite No need here to weigh the maternal, mitochondrial DNA. Multiply these 6 picogramns by the present, global human population of 6.7 billion. Thusly, a little more than 0.04 grams of zygotic DNA has been decoded into the present madding crowd of humans. Some demographers have estimated that 50 to 100 billion people have had their brief tenure on Carl Sagan's "mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam." Thusly, 0.3 to 0.6 grams of zygotic DNA represent a first-pharisaical approximation of the human gene pool. A metal, No. 1 paper clip weighs 0.5 grams. What may we conclude about our anthropocentricism? Ecce homo! Goethe's Comment by Robert Von Borstel [Comment posted 2009-07-26 16:56:38] -- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 ? 1832): "Science arose from poetry -- when times change, the two can meet again on a higher level as friends."
Goethe said it first. Alexander's nihilistic contribution exposures lamentable gene-centric ignorance by DENNIS HOLLENBERG [Comment posted 2009-07-24 11:47:20] Her statement "All these things that were written in her DNA, passed down from ancestors like legacies, a memory written in code of four letters: A C G T. On those four letters rested everything that she was, or could become." ignores the larger issue of the dynamics underlying and organizing development.
To state, as the gene-centrist and blindered dogma holds, that the gene accounts for (or equally short-sighted, "controls") behavior, development, etc., exhibits an exhilaratingly profound institutional ignorance peculiar to intellectually exhausted institutions. Please see my "On the evolution and dynamics of biological networks" Revista di Biologia/Biology Forum 100(1) 93-118 (2007). Hollenberg The Genome Poem by Robert Speth [Comment posted 2009-07-24 11:29:39] In 2000 I wrote a playful semiphilosphical poem, "The Genome Poem". It is published in the American Journal of Medical Genetics: (2003)120A: 308.
It was written in response to the statement of Craig Venter "The complexities and wonder of how the inanimate chemicals that are our genetic code give rise to the imponderables of the human spirit should keep poets and philosophers inspired for the milleniums." as well as in response to a seminar given by Francis Collins in which he questioned to what extent our genome could serve as a predicter of our destiny. Comment on this blog |