Aditya Bhambri

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Decades ahead of her time, the geneticist Barbara McClintock called the genome a “sensitive organ of the cell.” The words organ and sensitive reflected ideas totally foreign to geneticists in the fifties and sixties. Arguing against the atomistic gene-by-gene approach favored by geneticists, McClintock proposed, the genome could only be interpreted as a whole—as a “sensitive organ”—that was responsive to its environment.
The Song of the Cell: An Exploration of Medicine and the New Human
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