Science is everywhere

This past week I learned in my Genetics/Bacteria/Biotech/Embryology class about bacteria and the fact that they harbor every conceivable and inconceivable surface to the eye. No matter where you go, you will always be surrounded in and covered by bacteria. A Chinese study found that a single elevator button is home to more than 1,200 types of germs. As a graded activity for the class, I participated in a lab that aimed to identify a certain type of bacteria based on its colonial characteristics, using microscopic morphology and chemical tests (phenol test using dextrose, sucrose, and lactose, gram-staining). Through the microscope, I observed, objectively, through the objective lens and the oil-immersion lens, hundreds of strains of bacteria, all in the area of a 10 micrometer field of vision. Science is everywhere.

We live in a world where the only absolute certainties are our immediate bodies and our conscious minds. However, even the former item is sometimes an uncertainty. In fact, we are so often plagued by disease, the bane to mankind's existence, the unbeknownst quelling of factions of populations, yet we still have struggled to master the tiniest of organisms-the bacteria. This "vast and primeval, unfathomable, unconquerable" group of individuals is ubiquitous in our lives. It permeates our personal space, it saturates our lungs, it embeds in our skin, and yet we continue to survive for millenia. Science is everywhere.

Comments

  1. Its interesting you chose to mention how

    "the only absolute certainties are our immediate bodies and our conscious minds".

    If you look at George Berkeley's take on this, you'll come across a century long debate beginning with Descartes' absolute truth of "Cogito ergo sum" (I think therefore I am). John Locke refutes Berkeley, but its all very interesting.

    I'm not sure where you derived the "immediate bodies" part though.

    Good blog.

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  2. Great read marvin! I really enjoyed how you related this to GBBE. Very interesting way to interpret.

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  3. I couldn't trace back the study that stated that an elevator button has 1,200 types of germs. The closest I came was this article; https://www.cnn.com/2011/11/25/health/germiest-places-mall/index.html

    I liked how you also related it back to GBBE! Good post!

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