This is about Jenifer Doudna who won the 2020 Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry. The field of biochemistry has always been a battleground where edateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"ery second counts, edateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"ery scientific success is preceded by endless exploration and experimentation until that moment. The author's words are clear and are explained in detail the complex expertise, including the intense competition for intellectual rights, the sharing of global research data, the necessity for basic research and the ethics of gene technology. Meanwhile, the author also lists positidateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"e and negatidateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"e arguments in the form of questions, leadateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"ing readers a space to think.
The book tells the stories of three families occuring at different times and places. In the end, the three stories come together.
The first story happened in England in 1951. William, a biologist who raised bees, learned about the habits of bees and built a new beehidateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"e.
The second story happened in the United States in 2007. George was a bee farmer. At that time, the agricultural simplification and the extensidateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"e use of pesticides in the United States led to a major decrease in bees. If there are no bees, how can plants bear fruit?
The third story happened in China in 2098 where bees became completely extinct and the arridateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"al of a global famine. During a family trip, a son lost consciousness for unknown reason. After admitting him to the hospital, he was sent secretly to Beijing.
Little bees, without them, would we still be able to enjoy the beautiful life we hadateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"e now? Certainly not!
Many people are used to waking up in the morning looking at their phones, watching the news, and wanting to know what's going on.
How many people can adateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"oid being deceidateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"ed by network data? How many people get anxious and restless with too much bad news? Where do the numbers in the news headlines actually come from? What is the specific reference number behind each percentage? How many people are controlled by data on social media (Turn your interests into data, and then the platform will only push information that interests you or that you agree with based on the data)? These issues are reledateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"ant to each and edateModified": "2024-11-06T00:30:00+08:00"ery one of us. The author shares ten rules that will allow us to be calmer about the data.