D
Dr Mantis Toboggan
Guest
the Time magazine where she won person of the year has a few really interesting articles on her if you're interested
http://ideas.ted.com/the-promising-...k.com&utm_content=ideas-blog&utm_term=science
An interesting debate has been building for a few years now since the discovery of a gene editing system that is incredibly accurate. IMO its the biggest biological and genetic breakthrough since the discovery of DNA itself and I'd love to work on it in the future. In theory with this technology you could wipe our nearly all genetic disorders...but to do that you have to edit the genomes of human embryos, and here comes the debate!
Personally I'd be curious to use it to cure HIV. The system essentially replaces one gene with another and is so potent that it can spread through tissues like wildfire if necessary, thus removing all copies of the 'target' gene and replacing tem with another. I'd be intrigued to use this with HIV to eliminate a gene that helps HIV 'hide' in our bodies (which is one of the main reasons it is currently un-curable).
Regardless of the debate its and the possibilities are amazing to just think about.
Attenborough coming for the aquatic ape deniers like a fucking G
https://twitter.com/draliceroberts/status/775969142037942272
Absolutely doesCheers G. Took me a while to get round to listening to it (got a life...shock...horror) but very interesting, ties in quite well with some of my dissertation stuff on early humans. We don't get taught very much about why humans became bipedal (two footed) because it is still a very controversial topic. Not listened to the second episode yet but assume it may go on to mention how living in aquatic environments could have (in theory) favoured walking upright more. Can't remember the main arguments for the Savannah hypothesis (walking upright to see over long grasses when we came down from the trees 'so to speak') but both are quite plausible when you only consider one argument. Although the biology presented in that documentary is rather convincing for swaying it towards aquatic ape. Listening to that counts as 'homework', right!?
Absolutely does
It's a interesting theory which is greeted with quite vehement responses from its detractors. I've been interested in the subject for a while but hadn't realised quite how controversial it is. It can get quite flaky at the margins ( see mermaid believers) but I'm quite interested in the premise of human life evolving in a non linear way. The idea that human evolution was and is more complicated than is the generally accepted " Savannah truth"
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