Biological
in sentence
707 examples of Biological in a sentence
The good news is that the same technology that allowed miniaturization of electronics is now allowing us to miniaturize
biological
laboratories.
So, right now, we can actually miniaturize
biological
and chemistry laboratories onto microfluidic chips.
It doesn't take lots of technology or
biological
evolution to be able to do arbitrary computation; just something that happens, naturally, all over the place.
Well, this has deep implications about the limits of science, about predictability and controllability of things like
biological
processes or economies, about intelligence in the universe, about questions like free will and about creating technology.
And all of that stuff is really disgusting, but what's really insidious is the
biological
pollution that happens because of the magnitude of the shifts that it causes to entire ecosystems.
And I'm going to just talk very briefly about two kinds of
biological
pollution: one is introduced species and the other is what comes from nutrients.
Now another form of pollution that's
biological
pollution is what happens from excess nutrients.
There were two sides: We had to solve the chemistry for making large DNA molecules, and we had to solve the
biological
side of how, if we had this new chemical entity, how would we boot it up, activate it in a recipient cell.
The
biological
effects are certainly hemispheric.
What's the process that's having the same effect in cultural evolution as sex is having in
biological
evolution?
Well, the good news, I think, is what I started with at the beginning of the Talk, which is that humans are not only smart; we're really inspirationally smart to the rest of the animals in the
biological
kingdom.
We actually have all of these cases where we overcome our
biological
limitations through technology and other means, seemingly pretty easily.
They have a
biological
base, just like the aurochs.
And then I find this: "All the evidence available in the
biological
sciences supports the core proposition that the cosmos is a specially designed whole with life and mankind as its fundamental goal and purpose, a whole in which all facets of reality have their meaning and explanation in this central fact."
And my colleague, James Fowler and I have been studying for quite sometime what are the mathematical, social,
biological
and psychological rules that govern how these networks are assembled and what are the similar rules that govern how they operate, how they affect our lives.
And what I've done is, I've looked at both environments like the coffeehouse, I've looked at media environments like the World Wide Web, that have been extraordinarily innovative; I've gone back to the history of the first cities; I've even gone to
biological
environments, like coral reefs and rain forests, that involve unusual levels of
biological
innovation.
Biological
yield is really important.
We're only just beginning to understand how the physical oceanography and the
biological
oceanography come together to create a seasonal force that actually causes the upwelling that might make a hot spot a hope spot.
And then within plant protection, I came into the discipline of
biological
pest control, which we actually define as the use of living organisms to reduce populations of noxious plant pests.
And
biological
pest control, by the way, or these "good bugs" that we are talking about, they've existed in the world for thousands and thousands of years, for a long, long time.
But only in the last 120 years, people started, or people knew more and more how to exploit, or how to use, this
biological
control phenomenon, or in fact, natural control phenomenon, for their own needs.
And what is the natural enemy, the
biological
control agent, or the "good bug" that we're talking about?
In other words, what we do there is amplify the natural control, or the
biological
control phenomenon.
In this table, you can actually see what is an impact of a successful
biological
control by good bugs.
And there goes the question, especially if you ask growers, agriculturists: Why
biological
control?
So safety, with respect to the application, is the number one answer that we get from growers, for "Why
biological
control?"
Fortunately, in either
biological
control or even natural control, resistance is extremely rare.
The more the public demands the reduction of chemicals, the more growers become aware of the fact that they should, wherever they can and wherever possible, replace the chemical control with
biological
control.
First of all, we need to find more robust, good and reliable
biological
solutions, more good bugs that we can either mass-produce or actually conserve in the field.
I write mathematical models which, in my case, are systems of differential equations, to describe
biological
mechanisms, such as cell growth.
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