In ancient Greece, the asclepion was a healing temple dedicated to Asclepius, the God of Medicine. Asclepius learned the art of surgery from the centaur Chiron and had the ability to raise the dead. The Rod of Asclepius is a roughhewn branch entwined with a single serpent.
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Cat's Cradle
One of my favorite novels is Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut. Written in 1963, it is a ridiculous over-the-top science fiction book that satirizes science, religion, war, politics, the end of the world, and midgets. One of the more amazing things is that Vonnegut describes a fictional discovery of "ice-nine." A single molecule of this substance can "teach" molecules of normal liquid water to arrange themselves as ice-nine. It is as if one molecule of ice can seed water molecules to become that exact form of ice. This, ladies and gentlemen, is exactly what a prion does. I doubt this was the first time anyone proposed this idea, but I was amazed when I realized that Vonnegut in science fiction imagined a mechanism that decades later elucidated previously inexplicable diseases. In any case, Cat's Cradle is a really entertaining, thought-provoking, and highly recommended book.
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