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Genes Quotes

Quotes tagged as "genes" Showing 1-30 of 143
Bill Watterson
“I have all these great genes, but they're recessive. That's the problem here.”
Bill Watterson, The Complete Calvin and Hobbes

“When you have only ever experienced privilege, equality feels like oppression.”
Adam Rutherford, How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality

Christopher Moore
“I think there was always some scrawny dreamer sitting at the edge of the firelight, who had the ability to imagine dangers, to look into the future in his imagination and see possibilities, and therefore survived to pass his genes on to the next generation. ”
Christopher Moore, The Lust Lizard of Melancholy Cove

Steven Pinker
“Of course genes can’t pull the levers of our behavior directly. But they affect the wiring and workings of the brain, and the brain is the seat of our drives, temperaments and patterns of thought. Each of us is dealt a unique hand of tastes and aptitudes, like curiosity, ambition, empathy, a thirst for novelty or for security, a comfort level with the social or the mechanical or the abstract. Some opportunities we come across click with our constitutions and set us along a path in life.”
Steven Pinker

Matt Ridley
“In a massive, long-term study of 17,000 civil servants, an almost unbelievable conclusion emerged: the status of a person's job was more likely to predict their likelihood of a heart attack than obesity, smoking or high blood pressure.”
Matt Ridley, Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters

Kamila Shamsie
“Those Genes Could Have Been Mine”
Kamila Shamsie, Kartography
tags: genes

Siddhartha Mukherjee
“Illness might progressively vanish so might identity. Grief might be diminished, but so might tenderness. Traumas might be erased but so might history. Infirmities might disappear, but so might vulnerability. Chance would become mitigated, but so, inevitably, would choice.”
Siddhartha Mukherjee, The Gene: An Intimate History

Jonathan Haidt
“People don’t adopt their ideologies at random, or by soaking up whatever ideas are around them. People whose genes gave them brains that get a special pleasure from novelty, variety, and diversity, while simultaneously being less sensitive to signs of threat, are predisposed (but not predestined) to become liberals. They tend to develop certain “characteristic adaptationsâ€� and “life narrativesâ€� that make them resonate—unconsciously and intuitively—with the grand narratives told by political movements on the left (such as the liberal progress narrative). People whose genes give them brains with the opposite settings are predisposed, for the same reasons, to resonate with the grand narratives of the right (such as the Reagan narrative).
Once people join a political team, they get ensnared in its moral matrix. They see confirmation of their grand narrative everywhere, and it’s difficult—perhaps impossible—to convince them that they are wrong if you argue with them from outside of their matrix. I suggested that liberals might have even more difficulty understanding conservatives than the other way around, because liberals often have difficulty understanding how the Loyalty, Authority, and Sanctity foundations have anything to do with morality. In particular, liberals often have difficulty seeing moral capital, which I defined as the resources that sustain a moral community.”
Jonathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

Thomas Hunt Morgan
“Except for the rare cases of plastid inheritance, the inheritance of all known cofactors can be sufficiently accounted for by the presence of genes in the chromosomes. In a word the cytoplasm may be ignored genetically.”
Thomas Hunt Morgan

A.J. Jacobs
“The strange fact that out of millions of people in the world, your mother and father met and decided to get married to each other. And out of the millions of sperm, that the one with your genes was the one that made it to the egg and fertilised the egg. I'll never forget it.”
A.J. Jacobs, Drop Dead Healthy: One Man's Humble Quest for Bodily Perfection

Saul Bellow
“In middle age you no longer thought such thoughts about free choice. Then it came over you that from one grandfather you had inherited such and such a head of hair which looked like honey when it whitens or sugars in the jar; from another, broad thick shoulders; an oddity of speech from one uncle, and small teeth from another, and the gray eyes with darkness diffused even into the whites, and a wide-lipped mouth like a statue from Peru. Wandering races have such looks, the bones of one tribe, the skin of another. From his mother he had gotten sensitive feelings, a soft heart, a brooding nature, a tendency to be confused under pressure.”
Saul Bellow, Seize the Day

Robert M. Sapolsky
“Rationality may be key to establishing peace, but the irrational importance of sacred values is key to establishing lasting peace.”
Robert M. Sapolsky, Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst

Robert M. Sapolsky
“We’re the only species that institutionalizes reconciliation and that grapples with –truth-, -apology-, -forgiveness-, -reparations-, -amnesty-, and –forgetting-.”
Robert M. Sapolsky, Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst

Robert M. Sapolsky
“Be careful when our enemies are made to remind us of maggots and cancer and shit. But also beware when it is our empathic intuitions, rather than our hateful ones, that are manipulated by those who use us for their own goals.”
Robert M. Sapolsky, Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst

Robert M. Sapolsky
“Anyone who says that our worst behaviors are inevitable knows too little about primates, including us.”
Robert M. Sapolsky, Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst

Anthony T. Hincks
“And he said...

...what you consume determines the DNA inside of you.”
Anthony T. Hincks

Jarle Breivik
“The fact that the body ages and dies is not
a mistake. It is part of the genes� strategy to copy themselves from
one generation of organisms to the next.”
Jarle Breivik, Making Sense of Cancer: From Its Evolutionary Origin to Its Societal Impact and the Ultimate Solution

Jarle Breivik
“We are temporary cell colonies made by our genes to pass them on to the next generation.”
Jarle Breivik

Steven Magee
“Rainbows mark the people that have not developed correctly.”
Steven Magee

Lana M. Rochel
“You need to undergo a million surgeries so that they cut it out of your genes!”
Lana M. Rochel, Kill Your Darlings: Long Poem

“We know the genes that allowed us to leave the bush and stand up. I want to find the ones that compel us to look up, the genes that code for religious behavior, that drive us to search for and connect with God.”
Brian Spector, The Genesis Genes

Steven Magee
“Your kids are your priority, as they are the future of your genetics.”
Steven Magee

“The claim made in popular debate that the race difference intelligence is genetic should be taken to mean that black and white children would not develop the same mean intelligence if raised in the same environment, and, perhaps, the stronger thesis that blacks would develop lower intelligence than identically raised whites in all practically possible environments. “Hereditarianismâ€� is a convenient label for the latter view, and its denial, the claim that identically raised blacks and whites would develop identical mean intelligence, may be called “environmentalism.”
Michael Levin, Why Race Matters

Ian McEwan
“O que você precisa entender é o seguinte. Um gene não é uma coisa. É uma ideia. Uma ideia sobre uma ¾±²Ô´Ú´Ç°ù³¾²¹Ã§Ã£´Ç. Uma impressão digital é uma coisa, um ±¹±ð²õ³Ùí²µ¾±´Ç.”
Ian McEwan

“A baby’s individual potential, whether they’re later diagnosed with a condition like PKU or a chromosomal change like Down syndrome, is impossible for anyone to predict from prenatal genetic testing alone. Each baby’s life journey will be unique. A combination of body, mind and spirit. Of the interactions between genes, environment and love.”
Jennifer J. Brown, When the Baby Is Not OK: Hopes & Genes

“Good genesâ€� and “bad genesâ€� are a kind of myth. What genes are â€� and what they are not â€� are often obscured by a lack of accurate information. They’re very, very small, but genes are physical things. Genes don’t have a soul, any more than a single cell does, or a hand, foot or eyeball does.”
Jennifer J. Brown, When the Baby Is Not OK: Hopes & Genes

“Mother Nature loves diversity and works with DNA variations continuously to create the lives of the future.”
Jennifer J. Brown, When the Baby Is Not OK: Hopes & Genes

“The time to change the narrative around newborn screening for genetic health conditions has come. “Differentâ€� doesn’t mean “inferiorâ€� or diseased. With stories of real lived experiences, parents, advocates and clinicians can revise the story with acceptance and hope.”
Jennifer J. Brown, When the Baby Is Not OK: Hopes & Genes

“Even if it is difficult to use DNA repair to directly improve longevity, our knowledge of it underpins our understanding of virtually every process of aging. Genes ultimately control the entire process of life: when and how much of each protein we make; whether our cells continue to live or suddenly stop dividing; how well our cells sense nutrients in their surroundings and respond to them; and how different molecules and cells communicate with one another. Genes control our immune system, which must maintain the delicate balance of reacting to invading pathogens without inducing chronic inflammation.
Direct damage to our DNA, and the cell’s seemingly paradoxical response to it, is only one of the ways our genetic program can be changed as to cause aging. For our DNA has two peculiarities. The first is that its end segments are special and protected, and the consequences of disrupting them are serious.”
Venki Ramakrishnan, Why We Die: The New Science of Aging and the Quest for Immortality
tags: dna, genes

Sol Luckman
“Epigenetics reveals that your body isn’t a genetically predetermined flesh robot, but is regulated by a set of gene switches that can be turned on or off—by you—mindfully. Ergo, our genes aren’t our destiny. We have far more control over their expression than most ever imagined.”
Sol Luckman, Get Out of Here Alive: Inner Alchemy & Immortality

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