Sentences with phrase «know about the biology»

Using what we know about biology both have been around longer than humans so neither could be caused by humans.
Tom Kirkwood of Newcastle University, UK, disagrees with the idea of a limit to human lifespan: «The idea does not really fit what we already know about the biology of the ageing process.
The existence of two mechanisms would make sense for what we know about biology: Salt is necessary for life, but too much salt can kill you, and not just in the sense that excess salt in the diet may be behind some cases of heart disease.
«Once we know about their biology, then we can design and pick the best practices to go after the plants before they're a problem,» she said, adding that many resources are available to help producers identify weeds, including online fact sheets and publications with photos.
When developing a new drug, researchers identify drug targets based on what they know about the biology of the disease, and then create compounds that affect those targets.
Although much is known about the biology of addiction and more is being discovered all the time, our response to people suffering from this condition has been one of stigmatization, compounding problems, and making access to effective treatment difficult.
How would you react if we discovered a sentient alien civilization, challenging everything we know about biology, chemistry, physics, religion and answering the questions man has asked throughout history?

Not exact matches

I know you didn't click on the headline to get a biology lesson, but it's important to understand that leadership is not really about traits or habits.
As for biology and physics, everything we know about them derives from painstakingly tracing God's creative activity.
Yet, given what we know about the formation of solar systems and the biology of life, combined with the fact that there are billions of galaxies each containing billions of stars, I find it perfectly plausible that alien life could exist.
(iii) you are a complete blowhard who has never studied one subject of university level biology, never been on an archaeological dig, never studied a thing about paleontology, geology, astronomy, linguistics or archaeology, but feel perfectly sure that you know more than the best biologists, archaeologists, paleontologists, doctors, astronomers botanists and linguists in the World because your mommy and daddy taught you some comforting stories from Bronze Age Palestine as a child.
Then again (and much more likely) the SOB doesn't even exist - and all this suffering and bloodshed is merely the outcome from ignorant, delusional believers who don't know crap from Crisco about evolutionary theory, genetics, astronomy, and biology.
I don't think you know much about science, biology in particular.
Look, if you don't know much about biology, that's fine, but don't go making stupid comments that misrepresent 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.
I am a well trained Physicist and I know about the history of the earth with evidences from [Geo] chemistry, physics, biology and the like and yet know that they all have holes and are «not proofs» of anything
1000 years ago, we did not know anything about molecular biology.
Your telling me, that given these FACTS that we know are true, a magic being called God chose to suspend the laws of physics and human biology about 2000 years ago to let us know he's here and never hear from him again or find any signs of his existance in the know Universe exept that book that you keep pulling nonsense quotes from?
(iii) you are a complete blowhard who has never studied one subject of university level biology, never been on an archeological dig, never studied a thing about paleontology, geology, astronomy, linguistics or archeology, but feel perfectly sure that you know more than the best biologists, archeologists, paleontologists, doctors, astronomers botanists and linguists in the World because your mommy and daddy taught you some comforting stories from Bronze Age Palestine as a child.
We do not start with knowing all about atoms and molecules and then seem to understand the phenomena of biology.
The happenings we know a lot about, thanks to evolutionary biology, particularly of the last four decades, are the roles of mutation, recombination of genes in sexual reproduction resulting in a great diversity of gene arrangements, and natural selection.
The rest of your comments only show that you never picked up a biology book and know nothing about evolution which is the problem with most Americans.
I am the only one I know about here, who actually is a biology major.
Wow you obviously know little about physics, biology, genetics, biochemistry or you would not even need to ask those questions.
I've known that in a general sort of way for a long time, but the concept really hit me earlier in the semester when I started taking biology and learning more about cells and nutrition.
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.
I have a biology degree and I'm not going to walk around like I know all about epigenetics.
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.
CHRISTINE STEWART FITZGERALD: So it sounds like you're looking at it from the biological standpoint and I think incorporating what we talked about earlier, some of those different cycles on looking at their individual needs and you can kind of customize that because I think you know, kind of what Jen said earlier is that there's a lot of different books out there that will talk about the new onesies of each of these but as a parent, I think you just have to find what works for you and their biology is going to be different and their temperaments are different and it's not a one size fits all approach.
(i have all A's in my basic sciences: environmental biology, botany, and astronomy but I know these are not «hard» sciences) I am thinking about grad school and would really hope I would not have to take two years of course work again.
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.
Another problem is that researchers know little about the biology of most disease - carrying critters, pests and invasive species, Burt says.
The problem is that it's very hard to know what that means about the biology of intelligence.
«We know remarkably little about these camel crickets, such as their biology or how they interact with other species,» Menninger says.
Often, it is difficult to know whether conservation strategies — for example, regulations about TMDL's (total maximum daily loads) of sediment — are well fitted to the geology and biology of a region.
I didn't know much about [evolution] but I had lots of experience with different techniques» in molecular biology, she says.
«We know next to nothing about this species» biology, it's evolution or it's position within the Oak family.
But a lot of basic research will be needed before any cloning attempt, since far more is known about cows, sheep, and mice than about canine reproductive biology.
«When factoring in what we know about tumor biology, that paradigm may no longer hold true.»
However, little is known in humans about the biology of CD4 - CTL generation, their functional properties, and heterogeneity, especially in relation to other well - described CD4 + memory T cell subsets.
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.
When factoring in what is now known about breast cancer biology and heterogeneity, breast conserving therapy (BCT) may offer a greater survival benefit over mastectomy to women with early stage, hormone - receptor positive disease, according to research from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
«Forty years ago, very little was known about breast cancer disease biology — such as subtypes, differences in radio - sensitivities, radio - resistances, local recurrence and in metastatic potential,» explains Bedrosian, the study's senior author.
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.
I teach a general course on molecular biology for anyone who wants to know about molecular biology.
Biologists are keen to sequence the nematode's genome because much is already known about the creature's molecular genetics and developmental biology — a state of affairs that should help researchers to assign functions to the genes the sequence reveals.
«I wish that I knew then what I know now, because I would have dealt with it differently and been more sophisticated about it,» says Greider, who currently heads the department of molecular biology and genetics at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.
In most cases, we simply do not know enough about the biology of a rare species to predict the effects of its extinction.
«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.
«The reason why this gene is interesting is because we know something about the biology of what it does and where it is expressed in the brain,» Frank said.
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