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One way of emphasizing the singularity of the recent past is [..] to observe that the total number of humans ever to have lived is estimated at around (a bit less than) 100 billion. One of Walt Whitman's poems has a memorable image—thinking of all past people lined up in orderly columns behind those living—‘row upon row rise the phantoms behind us’. Actually, looking over our shoulder, we would see only around 15 rows.

~ Robert M. May

Robert M. May Biology Human Population

Life is stranger than biology textbooks.

~ David Rains Wallace

David Rains Wallace Biology Life Strange

The human interpretation of a disability is a primitive departmentalized view of ignorance.

~ Alastair Agutter

Alastair Agutter Biology

Biological databases impose particular limitations on how biological objects can be related to one another. In other words, the structure of a database predetermines the sorts of biological relationships that can be 'discovered'. To use the language of Bowker and Star, the database 'torques,' or twists, objects into particular conformations with respect to one another. The creation of a database generates a particular and rigid structure of relationships between biological objects, and these relationships guide biologists in thinking about how living systems work. The evolution of GenBank from flat-file to relational to federated database paralleled biologists' moves from gene-centric to alignment-centric to multielement views of biological action.

~ Hallam Stevens

Hallam Stevens Biology Database

The contrast between genetic and environmental, between nature and nurture, is not a contrast between fixed and changeable. It is a fallacy of biological determinism to say that if differences are in the genes, no change can occur.

~ Richard C. Lewontin

Richard C. Lewontin Biology Philosophy Social Studies

Only by intertwining these two perspectives, the biological and the phenomenological, can we gain a fuller understanding of the immanent purposiveness of the organism and the deep continuity of life and mind.

~ Evan Thompson

Evan Thompson Biology Continuity Of Mind And Life Organism Phenomenology Teleology

Stalin’s teachings about gradual, concealed, unnoticeable quantitative changes leading to rapid, radical, qualitative changes permitted Soviet biologists to discover in plants the realization of such qualitative transitions that one species could be transformed into another’… The slide away from truth-directed science had disastrous results in agriculture. It was also humanly disastrous. Biologists who disagreed were shot or imprisoned.

~ Jonathan Glover

Jonathan Glover Belief System Biology Objective Truth Stalinism Truth

If you allow a creek to go back to being a creek, if you let the trees and the bramble get overgrown, and you let the stream overrun its banks whenever it wants to, the wetland will take care of itself. The water that trickles into the ocean will be clean and pristine if everything is just left alone to work the way it was designed to work. Earthworms have shown that they can take care of the soil in the same way that a wetland takes care of the water. Nature regenerates. It Cleans. It hides a multitude of sins.

~ Amy Stewart

Amy Stewart Animal Science Biology Earth Science Earthworm

They are near the bottom of the food chain - a meal for fish and birds - while humans eat from the top of the food chain, consuming an astonishing array of what lies on the planet. But eventually, even we become food for the worms. Shakespeare saw this connection, writing in Hamlet, A man may fish with a worm that hath eat of a king, and eat of a fish that hath fed of that worm.

~ Amy Stewart

Amy Stewart Amy Stewart Animal Science Biology Earth Science Earthworms Hamlet William Shakespeare

I had long ago stopped believing in promises. Biological imperatives, yes. Environmental factors, yes. Promises, no.

~ Jeff Vandermeer

Jeff Vandermeer Biology Environmental Factors Promise Promises

Biologists will teach us that the survival of the species depends on cooperation, not competition.

~ Robert Holden

Robert Holden Biology Competence Cooperate

Before the girl and the boy tie the knot, they feel like falling in love. And most of them do. Cupid works. Biology demands. And, sociology warrants.

~ Girdhar Joshi

Girdhar Joshi Biology Cupid Love

No, Carolyn, you can’t petition PETA to get a waiver from dissecting the frog. The frog’s already dead. It donated itself to science. Don’t let its sacrifice be in vain. -Brandon

~ Abigail Roux

Abigail Roux Biology Dissection Humor Science

It wasn’t that we started to look at things because there was now a mechanism by which to see them. There first had to be a will to see, buried somewhere inside living things. Without it, the mechanism would never have taken shape.

~ Kōji Suzuki

Kōji Suzuki Biology Darwinism Genetics Science

Heavy resistance strength training (loads > 85% 1RM) appears to evoke significant gains in maximal eccentric muscle strength.

~ Marco Cardinale

Marco Cardinale Biology Exercise Physiology

The foreign policy aim of ants can be summed up as follows: restless aggression, territorial conquest, and genocidal annihilation of neighboring colonies whenever possible. If ants had nuclear weapons, they would probably end the world in a week.

~ Bert Hölldobler

Bert Hölldobler Biology Entomology Myrmecology Science

In the ensuing chapters, we will look in some detail at particular manifestations of the modern scientific ideology and the false paths down which it has led us. We will consider how biological determinism has been used to explain and justify inequalities within and between societies and to claim that those inequalities can never be changed. We will see how a theory of human nature has been developed using Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection to claim that social organization is also unchangeable because it is natural. We will see how problems of health and disease have been located within the individual so that the individual becomes a problem for society to cope with rather than society becoming a problem for the individual. And we will see how simple economic relationships masquerading as facts of nature can drive the entire direction of biological research and technology.

~ Richard C. Lewontin

Richard C. Lewontin Biology Non Fiction Philosophy Science Sociology

...we do not own these woods. They own us.

~ Timothy Goodwin

Timothy Goodwin Biology Ecology Nature Riverfeet Press Wilderness Woods

I knew I was going to be a cellular biologist whose research would focus on scrutinizing every nuance of the cell's ultrastructure to gain insights into the secrets of cellular life.

~ Bruce H. Lipton

Bruce H. Lipton Biology Knowledge Life Research

TP53 seems to encode the greater good, like a suicide pill in the mouth of a soldier that dissolves only when it detects evidence that he is about to mutiny.

~ Matt Ridley

Matt Ridley Biology Cells Genes Genetics Genome

The virus altered the the eye of the beholder. That this change came at the expense of the beheld suggests that beauty in nature does not necessarily bespeak health, nor necessarily redound to the benefit of the beautiful.

~ Michael Pollan

Michael Pollan Beauty Biology Botany

Our terminal decline into old age and death stems from the fine print of the contract that we signed with our mitochondria two billion years ago.

~ Nick Lane

Nick Lane Biology Science

The outgroup is rocks.

~ Joseph Felsenstein

Joseph Felsenstein Biology Evolutionary Biology Origin Of Life Phylogenetics Science Humor Systematics

in human males, testosterone appears to promote behavior intended to dominate other people. This behavior can be expressed aggressively, even violently, as well as nonaggressively. Testosterone levels, even a single baseline measurement, correlate well with dominance behavior, that is, testosterone not only affects dominance behavior but also responds to it.

~ Randy J. Nelson

Randy J. Nelson Biology Endocrinology

winning or losing an agonist encounter has a dramatic impact on future aggressive behavior. Winners are more likely to initiate attacks against unknown opponents, whereas losers are more circumspect and likely to retreat from unfamiliar conspecifics, adopting an opportunistic strategy, picking and choosing their fights. In the worst case scenario, animals socially subjugated by constant threat and attack from dominant conspecifics develop a submissive phenotype, showing little or no aggressive behavior, essentially eliminating themselves from the gene pool.

~ Randy J. Nelson

Randy J. Nelson Biology

For humans—trapped in biology—there was no mercy: we lived a while, we fussed around for a bit and died, we rotted in the ground like garbage.

~ Donna Tartt

Donna Tartt Biology

Intelligence is the ability of a species to live in harmony with its environment.

~ Paul Watson

Paul Watson Animal Rights Biocentrism Biology Intelligence Veganism

If you happen to be one of the people who has a split zygomaticus major muscle, where the lower part of it is tethered to the overlying skin, this will create a dimple in your cheek when you smile.

~ Alice Roberts

Alice Roberts Biology Dimples

Imagine a house coming together spontaneously from all the information contained in the bricks: that is how animal bodies are made.

~ Neil Shubin

Neil Shubin Biology Dna

God is an energy, rather than an anthropomorphic being, and God's language is biology. Red blood cells, the principle of magnetic attraction, neurological synapse: each is a miracle, and in each is the presence and flow of God.

~ Guillermo Del Toro

Guillermo Del Toro Biology God Science

People, as curious primates, dote on concrete objects that can be seen and fondled. God dwells among the details, not in the realm of pure generality. We must tackle and grasp the larger, encompassing themes of our universe, but we make our best approach through small curiosities that rivet our attention - all those pretty pebbles on the shoreline of knowledge. For the ocean of truth washes over the pebbles with every wave, and they rattle and clink with the most wondrous din.

~ Stephen Jay Gould

Stephen Jay Gould Biology Knowledge Science Scientific Method Wonderful Life

Love is poetry plus biology.

~ Lawrence Durrell

Lawrence Durrell Biology Love Poetry

It seems that all eukaryotic cells either have, or once had (and then lost) mitochondria. In other words, possession of mitochondria is a sine qua non of the eukaryotic condition

~ Nick Lane

Nick Lane Biology Mitochondria Science

It is often thought that the life of the hunter-gatherer was one of feast and famine. But most available data suggest that they were surprisingly healthy and had a fairly stable diet and lifestyle. Not so the primitive farmers. In years when the crops failed, in settlements where the population density was high and where disease weakened the ability to cope even further, life would have been very hard indeed. The settled population could not migrate to follow the food supply as could hunter-gatherers. They were trapped.

~ Peter Gluckman

Peter Gluckman Anthropology Biology

From a biology point of view, the purpose of humanity is to ensure his survival by expanding his domain into the stars.

~ Osman Doluca

Osman Doluca Biology Humanity Purpose Science

...it is entirely illogical to consider biology in dichotomous terms of genes and environment—all of biology is based on the continuous interaction of both.

~ Peter Gluckman

Peter Gluckman Biology Genetics

All human movement is expressive.

~ Alexandra Pierce

Alexandra Pierce Biology Kinesiology Physiology

In bodies, a movement anywhere will send out a wave of response through the structure: the whole body participates, and the better organized it is around the skeletal core, the more clearly it reverberates. A person whose musculature is either slack or bound by excessive tension cannot act either as delicately or as powerfully as one that reverberates more freely.

~ Alexandra Pierce

Alexandra Pierce Biology Kinesiology Physiology

George Gey paid his way through a biology degree at the University of Pittsburgh by working as a carpenter and mason, and he could make nearly anything for cheap or free. During his second year in medical school, he rigged a microscope with a time-lapse motion picture camera to capture live cells on film. It was a Frankensteinish mishmash of microscope parts, glass, and 16-millimeter camera equipment from who knows where, plus metal scraps, and an old motor from Shapiro’s junkyard. He built it in a hole he’d blasted in the foundation of Hopkins, right below the morgue, its base entirely underground and surrounded by a thick wall of cork to keep it from jiggling when streetcars passed. At night, a Lithuanian lab assistant slept next to the camera on a cot, listening to its constant tick, making sure it stayed stable through the night, waking every hour to refocus it. With that camera, Gey and his mentor, Warren Lewis, filmed the growth of cells, a process so slow - like the growth of a flower - the naked eye couldn’t see it. They played the film at high speed so they could watch cell division on the screen in one smooth motion, like a story unfolding in a flip book.

~ Skloot

Skloot Biology Class Creative People Education Henrietta Lacks Science

The more closely two organisms depend upon each other the harder it becomes to tell where one organism ends and the other begins.

~ Chris Matakas

Chris Matakas Biology Relationships Symbiotic
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