"...As we resist the impulse, remembering that there are other good reasons not to smoke, we might spare a thought for Giordano Bruno, the Dominican friar, philosopher, mathematician and astronomer whose concept of the infinite universe expanded on Copernicus’s model; he was the first European to understand the universe as a continuum where the stars we see at night are identical in nature to the Sun. Bruno’s views were considered dangerously heretical by the (Roman) Inquisition, which imprisoned him in 1592; after eight years of refusals to recant, on this date in 1600, he was burned at the stake..."
I found this on a cancer website dealing with the theory of atavistic tendencies in human cells, which, is also fascinating.
So, to change the direction of my own thread, the theory of atavism speculates that cancer cells are not rogue cells, just throwbacks.
Ancient organisms were eukaryotic cells surviving independently. Modern organisms are complex symbiotic relationships of specialized versions of these cells.
If the theory of atavism is correct then cancer is the result of a gene switching on and creating replications of early primitive, independent cells, which, are basically growing and replicating in our bodies in the same way they would have in their primitive atmosphere.
Well, that was my Mother's day conversation with my children.
I found this on a cancer website dealing with the theory of atavistic tendencies in human cells, which, is also fascinating.
So, to change the direction of my own thread, the theory of atavism speculates that cancer cells are not rogue cells, just throwbacks.
Ancient organisms were eukaryotic cells surviving independently. Modern organisms are complex symbiotic relationships of specialized versions of these cells.
If the theory of atavism is correct then cancer is the result of a gene switching on and creating replications of early primitive, independent cells, which, are basically growing and replicating in our bodies in the same way they would have in their primitive atmosphere.
Well, that was my Mother's day conversation with my children.





