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[fly]This is Scientific Americans: 60-Second Science, I'm Steve Mirsky. Go a minute?
Only ten percent of people die from primary tumors, the real problem is when it spreads around the body, the problem of metastasis.
Arizona state University's Paul Davis speaking at the Pen Club in NYC.
I don't think we need to cure cancer, in fact, I don't really think cancer is a disease, so much as alternative form of living matter, we don't need to cure it, we just need to manage it for long enough people die from something else.
The cosmologies was asked to study cancer by the national cancer institute.
When cancer cells spread around the body, this is a physics problem, these cells are microscopic1 bodies being swept along in this raging torrent2, they wriggle3 around, they latch4 onto surface, the drill their way through. This is a sort of language that physicists5 and engineers can understand, cancer which said dominated by genetics and by a chemistry that's why we have, the therapies genetic6 and chemotherapies as the main approaches, I think we can open up a whole new frontier, just by thinking about the problem in totally different way.
Thanks for the minute for 60-second Science, I am Steve Mirsky
1 microscopic | |
adj.微小的,细微的,极小的,显微的 | |
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2 torrent | |
n.激流,洪流;爆发,(话语等的)连发 | |
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3 wriggle | |
v./n.蠕动,扭动;蜿蜒 | |
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4 latch | |
n.门闩,窗闩;弹簧锁 | |
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5 physicists | |
物理学家( physicist的名词复数 ) | |
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6 genetic | |
adj.遗传的,遗传学的 | |
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