Welcome to Discover The Science! Read, comment and enjoy... Latest News: Happy Summer 2011! Visit our new store! Get all the materials for your projects here
Your Ad Here

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Chemistry in Your Day : Atoms and Humans

Dear Reader,
Thank you for reading our blog and contributing by comments and suggestions.
We are now commencing a new series called Chemistry in Your Day, this would be a section where we are going to discuss about how chemistry affects our daily life and how certain phenomenon in our life could be explained with chemistry. This series is taken from Chemistry: A Molecular Approach by Nivaldo J. Tro.
We would like to share a little bit of information from this book.

For this edition of CYD, we are going to discuss The Relation of Atoms and Humans

We are all composed of atoms. we get those atoms from the food we eat over the years. Yesterday's cheeseburger contributes to today's skin, muscle, and hair. The carbon atoms in our own bodies have been used by other living organisms before we got them and will be used by still others when we are done with them. In fact, it is likely that at this moment, your body contains some carbon atoms that were at one time part of your chemistry teacher.

The idea that humans are composed of atoms acting in accord with the laws of chemistry and physics has significant implications and raises many important questions. if atoms compose our brains, for example, do they determine our thoughts and emotions? Are our feelings caused by atoms acting according to the laws of chemistry and physics?

Richard Feynman - Physicist
Richard Feynman (1918-1988), a Nobel Prize-winning physicist, asserted The most important hypothesis in all of biology is that everything that animals do, atoms do. In other words, there is nothing that living things do that cannot be understood from the point of view that they are made of atoms acting according to the laws of physics.

Indeed, biology has undergone a revolution throughout the last 50 years, mostly through the investigation of the atomic and molecular basis for human life. Some have seen the atomic view of life as a devaluation of human life. We have always wanted to distinguish ourselves from everything else, and the idea that we are made of the same basic patterns as all other matter takes something away from that distinction, or does it?
Share |

No comments:

Post a Comment