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@catherinetaylorxo:
Catherinetaylorxo
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Region: US
Sunday 27 March 2022 11:37:55 GMT
3763
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No Watermark .mp4 (
0.82MB
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No Watermark(HD) .mp4 (
0.54MB
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Watermark .mp4 (
0.81MB
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Music .mp3
Comments
warrior_angel_777 :
πολύ όμορφη
2022-03-27 13:50:17
0
Héctor García :
very Nice y beautiful 🥰🥰
2022-03-27 14:12:48
0
Xavier :
Idk why 🥰
2022-03-27 17:11:59
0
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Schrödinger and the Secret of Life – How a Physicist Changed Biology Forever Schrödinger and the Secret of Life explores the fascinating story of how one of the 20th century’s greatest physicists sparked a scientific revolution. In 1944, Erwin Schrödinger published What Is Life?, a visionary work that connected the laws of quantum physics with the mysteries of heredity. His ideas directly inspired James Watson, Francis Crick, and others to uncover the double-helix structure of DNA. This journey reveals how Schrödinger’s curiosity and bold thinking broke disciplinary boundaries, laying the foundation for modern molecular biology. Schrödinger and the Secret of Life When you hear the name “Schrödinger,” you probably picture a cat in a box, both dead and alive at the same time. But Schrödinger didn’t spend his life torturing imaginary cats. In 1944, the Austrian physicist published a small but influential book titled What is Life?. He wasn’t a biologist, but he dared to step into unfamiliar territory to answer one of humanity’s greatest questions: What makes life… alive? Schrödinger proposed a bold idea — the instructions for living things must be stored in a stable molecular structure, something he called an aperiodic crystal. It was a poetic and scientific way to imagine the genetic code long before it was discovered. Nearly a decade later, James Watson and Francis Crick read Schrödinger’s book… and a spark ignited. Combined with crucial work by Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins, this spark would lead to one of the greatest discoveries of the 20th century: the double helix structure of DNA. In the end, a quantum physicist, simply by asking “What is life?”, helped inspire the decoding of life’s blueprint. A reminder that the biggest questions know no boundaries between sciences… Because life — like quantum physics — doesn’t fit in just one box.
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