diff --git a/content/images/the_machinery_of_life.png b/content/images/the_machinery_of_life.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..513fd6b Binary files /dev/null and b/content/images/the_machinery_of_life.png differ diff --git a/content/posts/the-machinery-of-life.md b/content/posts/the-machinery-of-life.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..37c0630 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/posts/the-machinery-of-life.md @@ -0,0 +1,52 @@ +--- +title: "The Machinery of Life" +date: 2023-12-13T23:25:43+01:00 +image: /images/the_machinery_of_life.png +--- + +For my 18th birthday, I asked my relatives for some books that I haven't gotten to yet in my read list. +One particularly stood out.. titled The Machinery of Life from David S. Goodsell. +I remember noting this title after watching a live stream from one of my most respected YouTubers, [@TheThoughtEmporium](https://www.youtube.com/@thethoughtemporium). + +The live was about starting out in genetic engineering. How difficult it is, how expensive can it get, all the caveats that come along the way, etc. +I don't know why I watched that live. Maybe just because the title seemed cool and interesting. But after finishing the live stream and noting a couple of +interesting resources Justin offered (books, websites, ...), I closed my text editor and never looked at that notes file again. +Re-seeing this title in my notes file right before my birthday made me want to explore it. And so this is what I got. + +I must say that I have been really enjoying this book, even though I haven't devoted many hours of my life to biology - and my main focus is still in computer science. +I particularly like the illustrations, most of which were (apparently) either hand drawn with watercolors (see the thumbnail) or rendered by a computer. + +As this is my first book that delves deep into biology, reading it is a real perspective shifter an a half! +I never considered the level of complexity one has to fight when dealing with biology at such a minuscule level. + +--- + +Here's my favorite quote, taken directly from the book: + +``` +..................................Cells in our retina are filled with +arrays of opsin proteins for sensing light, light that is focused by +layers of eye lens cells packed full of clear crystalling proteins. Cells in +our skin spin enormously long strands of keratin proteins into hairs, +and other cells sense their slightest movement. These and other +sensory data are transmitted and processed by nerve cells that carry +electrical currents propagated by proteins and insulated by con- +centric layers of lipid. Fine control of movement is accomplished by +an enormous skeleton of mineralized bone cells, moved by muscle +cells filled with proteins that do nothing but contract, all glued +together by connective tissue cells that built tough layers of sugar +and protein........................................................... +``` + +It's so beautiful how, with some imagination, you can picture the author +taking you to every part of your body. Imagine just how complex that system +has to be to work so well for such a long time and be able to sustain itself +while running. It's also an amazing analogy I remember from the book.. + +``` +...............................................Think about this +feat for a moment-it is remarkable. You can't take your cells to a +shop for repairs, like you would with a broken clock. Cells must make +their repairs in place, without ever disturbing the ongoing processes of +living. Imagine replacing a worn fan belt on your car, but doing it while +driving down the road.................................................