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"Book Review: "The Quest for the Cure" by B.R. Stockwell"

8 Comments -

1 – 8 of 8
Blogger Phil Warnell said...

Hi Bee,

Undrugable proteins, this realization alone has made the reading of this piece worthwhile, for it’s a word that like many you described as contained in this book even my spell checker would reject. For instance it would have it to be “unarguable” proteins. I also agree with you when you say we should commend Stockwell for even making the attempt to demystify this increasingly complex field of science and I as such I might consider reading it just for the vernacular exposure. However as it is I’m still attempting to finish a coupled of books you’ve previously prompted me to read and as such it might have to wait for a while. Then again in the end I’m still hopeful physics might solve all these problems as having it possible that when one becomes seriously ill to have a previous record of one’s total state able to be exactly duplicated and then have its brain uploaded with all one has experienced since. That is in other words instead of being cured we will be simply recreated and rebooted.


“Death is not an event in life: we do not live to experience death. If we take eternity to mean not infinite temporal duration but timelessness, then eternal life belongs to those who live in the present. Our life has no end in just the way in which our visual field has no limits.”

- Ludwig Wittgenstein “Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus - 6.4311” (1921)

Best,

Phil

8:30 AM, April 06, 2012

Blogger PTMR said...

If you want to understand more about cell biology I strongly recommend "Molecular Biology of the Cell" by Bruce Alberts and "Biochemistry" by Lubert Stryer.

They are THE books on the subject, very well written, with great illustrations, start from the basics and explain everything clearly and in detail. A great investment imo.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Molecular-Biology-Cell-Bruce-Alberts/dp/0815341067/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1333719256&sr=1-1

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Biochemistry-International-Jeremy-M-Berg/dp/1429276355/ref=pd_sim_b_1

9:44 AM, April 06, 2012

Blogger Plato Hagel said...

In a way you could say your physics view is an "expansionary view" of the universe and the subject is an formative expression of it.

So where did it all begin?

Hmmm.... the way in which we can look at things?:)

Best,

11:45 AM, April 06, 2012

Blogger Uncle Al said...

"...the human body is made of..." Stereochemistry at all scales, Bee, physical chirality - the non-superposability of mirror images. Looking glass milk is not good to drink. Physics willfully excludes a testable vacuum interaction toward massed fermions explaining why non-classical gravitations fail (hey, Green's theorem + GR = nothing) and SUSY is a cesspool.

Protein therapeutics could be replaced by "simple" organic scaffolds performing the same chemistry inside, with site selectivity obtaining outside. Not likely. Protein is remarkably good at specificity, as COX-2 inhibitors lethally are not. Viagra was sloppy, Cialis less so but still.

"nuclear magnetic resonance" discovered by physics, enobled by chemistry, impenetrable without knowing a boat load of stuff irrelevant to each alone. If you press the "diagonal" key on a Bruker NMR keyboard, the NMR lady screams, then you.

An antibody masses 150,000 daltons. Cocaine base masses 303.35 daltons. Innoculating a person against a gram of cocaine requires 500 g of circulating antibody. It was generously funded. Blödsinn!

3:13 PM, April 06, 2012

Blogger Bee said...

Hi PTMR,

Thanks for the references. I've put that on my wishlist. They're quite expensive! Best,

B.

2:12 AM, April 07, 2012

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Phil,

I have the impression that Stockwell's motivation to write the book is partly political. He is making a case that this research is relevant and needs continued funding. The graph that he starts with, that I mentioned, it actually shows not only that the number of drug approvals is dropping but that it's dropping despite the R&D funding increased. You can see the graph on Amazon Search Inside. It's on page 5.

So I think a major part of the target group of his book are policy makers who want to know what's the matter and what's next. Best,

B.

4:15 AM, April 07, 2012

Blogger Kay zum Felde said...

Hi Bee,

I had chemistry as a "Leistungskurs" in school, and we have biochemistry one half-year. There're only a few chemical reactions, that rule biochemistry. Unfortunately this is such a long time ago, that I don't remember all that stuff. The names of the biochemical molecules are also given by some structure. I don't know exactly, what book to recommend, so I try with http://www.amazon.de/Biochemie-Eine-Einf%C3%BChrung-Lerneinheiten-Springer-Lehrbuch/dp/3540211640/ref=sr_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1334064278&sr=1-4 , but the best is to look for yourself.

Best, Kay

9:34 AM, April 10, 2012

Blogger Kay zum Felde said...

Hi Bee,

that was not entirely correct, what I was posting before. We had one half-year organic chemistry in school. And there exist only a few reactions. And as you know biochemistry is based on organic chemistry. I cannot recommend a book, but a book based on organic reactions should serve your needs.

Best, Kay

10:40 AM, April 15, 2012

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