en

Siddhartha Mukherjee

  • Sara Mirhas quotedlast year
    They are more perfect versions of ourselves
  • Sara Mirhas quotedlast year
    The link was correct, but the causality was not: civilization did not cause cancer, but by extending human life spans—civilization unveiled it.
  • Sara Mirhas quotedlast year
    few years later, Ehrlich found that certain toxins, injected into animals, could generate “antitoxins,” which bound and inactivated poisons with extraordinary specificity (these antitoxins would later be identified as antibodies
  • Sara Mirhas quotedlast year
    The biological universe was full of molecules picking out their partners like clever locks designed to fit a key:
  • Sara Mirhas quotedlast year
    If biology was an elaborate mix-and-match game of chemicals, Ehrlich reasoned, what if some chemical could discriminate bacterial cells from animal cells—and kill the former without touching the host?
  • Sara Mirhas quotedlast year
    diseases were just pathological locks waiting to be picked by the right molecules.
  • Sara Mirhas quotedlast year
    was like the meeting of two stranded travelers, each carrying one-half of a map.
  • Sara Mirhas quoted10 months ago
    Like all cells, bacteria need to replicate DNA in order to divide. Cisplatin had chemically attacked DNA with its reactive molecular arms, cross-linking and damaging the molecule irreparably, forcing cells to arrest their division.
  • Laurahas quoted3 months ago
    Cell division allows us as organisms to grow, to adapt, to recover, to repair—to live. And distorted and unleashed, it allows cancer cells to grow, to flourish, to adapt, to recover, and to repair—to live at the cost of our living. Cancer cells grow faster, adapt better. They are more perfect versions of ourselves.
  • Laurahas quoted3 months ago
    (This was yet another colonial fascination: to create the conditions of misery in a population, then subject it to social or medical experimentation.)
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