Tagged with “cells” (8) activity chart

  1. Jonathan Moreno - Our New Biopolitics

    Human cloning. Synthetic biology. Mood (and mind) altering drugs. Personalized medicine.

    Such topics are rarely at the top of the political agenda. Yet the changes they’re causing, often below the radar, are monumental. Issues of personhood, identity, ethics, are at play. The human future may be very different from the human past as these changes are negotiated and assimilated.

    And so may human politics.

    To help us prepare for this radical future is Jonathan Moreno, author of the new book The Body Politic: The Battle Over Science in America, which underscores the strange bedfellow allegiances that may occur in what has been called our "biological century."

    Jonathan Moreno is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and on the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is one of 13 Penn Integrates Knowledge university professors.

    He is a historian, medical ethicist, and philosopher, and was part of Barack Obama’s transition team.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants one year ago

  2. Science Friday Archives: Oliver Sacks and ‘The Mind’s Eye’

    Science, technology, environment and health news and discussion from the makers of the NPR public radio program Science Friday with host Ira Flatow.

    http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201012035

    —Huffduffed by hugo one year ago

  3. Lab-grown Meat: A Podcast with Michael Specter : The New Yorker

    Online version of the weekly magazine, with current articles, cartoons, blogs, audio, video, slide shows, an archive of articles and abstracts back to 1925

    http://www.newyorker.com/online/2011/05/23/110523on_audio_specter

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 2 years ago

  4. Science Friday Archives: Listening To Wild Soundscapes

    Science, technology, environment and health news and discussion from the makers of the NPR public radio program Science Friday with host Ira Flatow.

    http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201104223

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 2 years ago

  5. Science Friday Archives: Digital Sampling and Remix Culture: Creativity or Criminality?

    Science, technology, environment and health news and discussion from the makers of the NPR public radio program Science Friday with host Ira Flatow.

    http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201101287

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 2 years ago

  6. Radiolab: Famous Tumors

    http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/episodes/2010/05/07

    In this hour of Radiolab: an unflinching look at tumors. Famous tumors. Surprising stories of evolution, immortality, and maybe…God? Say hello to the growth that killed Ulysses S. Grant, and get to know the woman whose cancer cells changed modern medicine.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 2 years ago

  7. Robots: Brain-Machine Interfaces

    Charles Higgins from the University of Arizona tells us how he uses insects to control robot motion. Steve Potter from the Georgia Institute of Technololgy explains how he grows neural circuitry in a Petri-dish and interfaces it with robots.

    http://www.robotspodcast.com/

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 3 years ago

  8. BBC Material World - The Ribosome

    “Everything in our cells is either made by the ribosome, or made by another molecule that itself was made by the ribosome” says Professor Venki Ramakrishnan, one of the handful of experts to unpick the secrets of this powerhouse of life.

    And as well as being a universal fabricator – shared in essence by every living thing – the ribosome could be the most direct connection within us to the very origins of life, that warm pond of chemicals 4 billion years ago, where self-replicating molecules, perhaps made of RNA like the heart of the ribosome, started the long ascent to complexity.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 4 years ago