Sentences with phrase «how about some biology»

How about some biology; Human life is not viable at conception, not until it adheres to the uterine wall.

Not exact matches

Rob, how about STEM and biology / medicine?
And while I could give you Christian truths and platitudes about how there are many people who, for one reason or another, never had children via biology or adoption and are living happy lives, that's not helpful for you right now.
In contrast, ready evidence directly contradicts statements in the Christian bible about the basics of biology, such as how diseases propagate, and even about basic bodily functions, e.g. of the kidneys.
If a YEC can not understand how their beliefs are contradicted by evidence from really any field of science, from physics to geology to biology, then I have doubts about their abilities to be talented engineers.
But please do go on tell me more about how evolution is in fact «false», disprove genetic evidence, paleontological evidence, anatomical evidence, evidence from cell biology, virology, zoology, mycology, should I keep going?
Jack: Why would you think NOW is the time to have conversations about how traditional roles might be good to return to and should be determined by our biology?
This is most evident in how physics and biology have profoundly changed the way in which man thinks about the universe and about life within it.
Indeed, we are no closer to such an explanation today than when Darwin wrote his Origin of Species — a great work in scientific biology but one that tells us nothing credible about how species originate.
Of course controversy still rages about how genuinely explanatory the term natural selection is inside the undisputed reality of evolutionary biology....
After getting it and starting to work with / write about nutrition, I realized how much I had to learn about the fundamentals of biology and nutrition science.
In biology, rather than: «your lab report must include drawings of your observations and a graph,» how about: what do you need to include in your lab report so that others can understand your process and your results?
«How do we learn from basic biology to educate both mom and health professionals about the mystery of what's happening early in life?»
Come learn about the biology of sleep in babies, how does baby sleep differ from adult sleep and why?
You can tell us about how you are «informed» all you want, but if what you say is steeped in ignorance, your assertions will be greeted as kindly as the «I have a 4.0 gpa in biology so I know what I am talking about» claim that was accompanied by a lack of critical thinking.
Society still hasn't grown open - minded enough about the biology of women to make it a stress - free experience, so it's one of those parenting milestones that no one looks forward to, no matter how many daughters they've seen over to the other side.
I just finished «Our Babies, Ourselves» by Meredith Small about how biology and culture shape the way parenting happens all over the world.
A great example of how much we still have to learn about the biology of death.
The intriguing thing to me about working in agricultural biotechnology at this moment is watching how a multitude of subdisciplines such as plant physiology, biochemistry, genetics, molecular biology, bioinformatics, and molecular and conventional breeding are blending into one big continuum where the lines begin to blur.
«People have thought about how forest loss matters for an ecosystem, and maybe for local temperatures, but they haven't thought about how that interacts with the global climate,» said co-author Abigail Swann, a UW assistant professor of atmospheric sciences and of biology.
«If there is a rule in biology, I can think about how it does not apply to fungi.
«Everything we talked about was about research directly on the embryo,» for example, to improve on infertility treatment or better understand cancer biology, says R. Alta Charo, a law professor and bioethicist at the University of Wisconsin Law School who was a member of the NIH Human Embryo Research Panel in the mid-1990s, which considered how embryos might be used in research.
What would inevitably follow would be a discussion about the nature of dinosaurs, of birds, of evolution and development, of the relationship of molecular biology to big changes in evolution, of how we know what we know, and whether we were justified in doing what we did.
Ask a cross-section of scientists how they got into cancer research, and you'll hear about a dizzying variety of routes from fields as diverse as biology, pharmacology, mathematics, and medicine.
Dong Wook Han, a professor of stem - cell biology at Konkuk University in Seoul, is worried about how the country regulates clinical research on stem cells.
«Systems biology has been able to generate these amazing hypotheses about how genes interact,» Baliga says.
Studying the vying for nutrients in the cell «will teach us really interesting biology about how the cell senses the presence of a parasite metabolically, and how the cell is able to metabolically respond,» Pernas says — knowledge that could lead to new therapies.
The DIY - biology community, as a stakeholder that has already addressed many of the underlying issues, should take part in a robust public dialogue about the use of CRISPR — Cas9 and how governance models can ensure safe, responsible research.
«We know remarkably little about these camel crickets, such as their biology or how they interact with other species,» Menninger says.
«By learning more about how these cells work, we are one step closer to understanding the disease states in which these cells should be studied,» said Cagla Eroglu, an assistant professor of cell biology and neurobiology at the Duke University Medical Center, who led the research.
Long - term support is also needed to address complex questions about how synthetic biology could impact the environment and overcome communication barriers across disciplines, the report says.
Though little is known about Loki, scientists hope that it will help to resolve one of biology's biggest mysteries: how life transformed from simple single - celled organisms to the menagerie of complex life known as eukaryotes — a category that includes everything from yeast to azaleas to elephants.
A novel Yale study answers age - old questions about how cancers spread by applying tools from evolutionary biology.
At that time, little was known about the molecular biology of development — how what's going on in the development process itself influences what can happen to the evolutionary trajectory of cells and organisms.
To understand how floral characteristics can combine to influence the decisions bumblebees make about which flowers to visit, Robert Gegear, assistant professor of biology and biotechnology at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), had bees forage on arrays of paper representations of typical «hummingbird flowers» (red coloration, horizontal orientation) and «bee flowers» (lavender or blue coloration, upright orientation).
We want to learn more about how these forces affect anatomy, behavior and microbiology,» said the paper's corresponding author, Michael Levin, Ph.D., Vannevar Bush professor of biology and director of the Allen Discovery Center at Tufts and the Tufts Center for Regenerative and Developmental Biology.
And many exchanges were heated because, despite 150 years of research on the biology of evolution, scientists still disagree about how and why multicellular creatures and plants emerged from ancient oceans that teemed with robust and self - reliant single - celled entities.
«Mantis shrimp, or stomatopods, are well known for aggressive temperaments and complex visual systems, but until now we've known very little about whether and how they use color to communicate with other mantis shrimp,» said Amanda Franklin, a Ph.D. student in the biology department of Tufts University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and the first and corresponding author on the paper.
«Until now, we haven't had a compelling narrative about how leaf and stem traits have evolved to tolerate cold temperatures,» said lead author Amy Zanne, assistant professor of biology in George Washington University's Columbian College of Arts and Sciences who earned her doctorate at UF.
Using methods and ideas from mathematics, physics and biology, they characterized the shape of eggs from about 1,400 species of birds and developed a model that explains how an egg's membrane determines its shape.
But while we have decades of data in mice about these nervous system support cells, how relevant those experiments are to human biology (and the success of potential therapies) has been an open question.
«What was really cool about this research was we've known for a long time that a lot of different transcription factors were involved, but it was hard to understand how all the pieces fit together,» said Jenny Mortimer, director of plant systems biology at the Joint BioEnergy Division, a part of the Department of Energy.
The research reveals how natural biology, through evolutionary experimentation, can teach us new things about how animals naturally cope with conditions that would cause disease in humans.
Sadly, the debate today is not about how to create the best courses that reflect the wonders and excitement of modern biology but rather over whether to teach creationism.
So it could be RNA or DNA like we have in modern biology or it could be some related kind of material; and we are also thinking about some kind of cell envelope or cell membrane — not that that's necessarily the very first way Darwinian systems began, but at some point they had to transition into a system more related to modern biology where cells are all bounded by membranes — so we're thinking about how to assemble these two components and get them to interact with each other.
At the time, McFadden, a member of Surrey's biology department, wanted to ask physicists for advice about how to handle a puzzle regarding DNA mutations.
«We were mining the DNA record for information about how evolution works,» says Carroll, professor of molecular biology and genetics at UW - Madison and vice president for science education at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI).
«Now that we have the cellular and molecular information, the future promises to be very exciting when this knowledge can be used to understand how this system is formed during gestation and how the different neuron types go about controlling the body's functions,» says study leader Patrik Ernfors, professor of tissue biology
I want to look at our best innovations and say, in the face of an epidemic, where we have to scientifically go fast, can't we use some of our new things about how we understand molecular biology, about plasma, it's about production?»
There were people, Eric Lander came up from the Broad Institute, and he was talking about how, you know, it used to be that biology was looking through microscopes and classifying stuff and how he hated biology when he was a young student, so he just, like, couldn't understand why anyone would memorize all this stuff.
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