The
biology of luxury (October 16th 2012)


The anti-fragile life of the economy



The anti-fragile life of the economy may be its saving
grace
A vida anti-frágil da economia

Antifragilität. Was
die Wirtschaft von der Evolution lernen kann 
A Greek view on Health and Nutrition
by AMAbiotics
The
strategic importance of biology for the world economy,
july 2011
Biotech Info. La lettre des
biotechnologies
11
mai 2011 n°525 
A Danchin
Motivated research
EMBO Reports (2010) 11: 488
Opening: Three years ago, a
senior politician attended his country’s Annual Congress
for the Advancement of Science to give the introductory
lecture. He asked the attending scientists to make
science and research more attractive to young students
and the general public, and asked his countrymen to
support scientists to address the urgent challenges of
global climate change, energy needs and dwindling water
resources. It was neither a European nor a US
politician, but the Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
who made this speech about the relationship between
research and its practical applications. This is such an
important topic that one might think it deserves
appropriate attention in Europe, yet we fail to address
it properly. Instead, we just discuss how science should
serve society or contribute to the ‘knowledge-based
economy’, or how ‘basic’ or ‘fundamental’ research is
opposed to ‘applied’ or ‘industrial’ research and how
funding for ‘big science’ comes at the expense of
‘little academic’ research.
A Danchin
Perfect time, or perfect crime?
EMBO Reports (2010) 11: 74
Opening: Imagine the situation:
“One day, you notice an old country woman crossing a
downtown street, just about to put one foot down on the
rails of the streetcar line. […] Suppose, now, that at
the very moment she puts her foot on the rail a
streetcar comes rushing down the tracks toward her. If
the old woman does not notice the car and continues
across the tracks nothing will happen. But if someone
should happen to shout ‘Look out, old woman!’ what would
be her natural reaction? […] she would suddenly become
flustered and would pause to decide whether to go on or
step back […] the mere words ‘Look out, old woman!’
would be as dangerous a weapon as any knife or firearm.
[…] the man who sounds the warning actually becomes a
murderer!” (Ranpo, 1956).
BoOks : Les gènes
du bien et du mal en débat au Centre Georges Pompidou,
10 mai 2010