Biology/Citable Version

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Biology is the science of life. Biologists study all aspects of living things, including each of the many life forms on Earth as well as the dynamic processes within them that enable life. Those vital processes include the harnessing of energy, the synthesis of the materials that make up the body, the healing of injuries, and the reproduction of the entire organism, among many other activities.

Living organisms have been of interest to all peoples throughout history, and, accordingly, the roots of biology go back to earliest mankind. Curiosity about the physical beings of people, plants, and animals still runs deep in every human society. How is it that these living bodies change; develop, grow, and age? What is it that underlies the divide between inanimate objects and living entities? Some of those questions stem from our desire to control life processes and to exploit natural resources. Pursuit of the answers has led to an understanding of organisms that has steadily improved our standard of living through the ages; but questions also come from a desire to understand nature rather than to control it. The very core of that desire is sparked by a commonly felt need to understand the nature of the world. Biology brings its own answers to these questions and provides a useful way of learning about living things.

Not all natural lore is biology, no matter how accurate or helpful. Although the word 'biology' is sometimes used conversationally to refer to matters that concern flesh and blood, and living creatures, this introductory article is focused on biology as a formal science. Biologists incorporate an understanding of mathematics, physics, chemistry and other sciences, along with the scientific method, into their study of living things. Still, all human interaction with nature eventually adds to that study; whether ideas came from evidence in the laboratory or from the studbook of the breeder, from the notebook of the ecologist or the field notes of the hunter.

The Scope of Biology

How did life begin? What features separate something that is alive from something that is not alive? Biologists use science to try and answer these fundamental questions, questions that also concern the philosopher, the rabbi, the imam, or the priest - as well as every person who retains a sense of wonder. Whether scientific thinking about these issues is compatible with religious beliefs is contentious. Some religious leaders have deplored the scientist's mechanistic view of nature that seems to remove the need for active intervention of a 'Creator'. Some notable scientists, such as Francis Crick, who regarded religion as mere superstition, welcomed biological explanations as providing a rational basis for the world; free of the need to invoke mysterious powers. Some other great thinkers, however, such as the physicist Albert Einstein, found no conflict between the varying teachings of science and religion, but consider divinity and the natural universe to be one and the same (see Albert Einstein for detailed discussion with references). In this view, mathematical equations and the language of prophets are simply two different forms of human expression, each attempting to describe a higher dimension than ordinary humans experience.

Although science addresses fundamental issues about life, biology is also used to answer practical questions, which are posed to advance medical and dental care, agriculture and animal husbandry. It is through applied biology that the health sciences became such effective healing arts and that the world's food supply has become safer and more plentiful.

Many independent scientific fields make up biology, but all are related. Natural history (the study of individual species like white-tailed deer, sugar maple trees, box jellyfish and timber wolves) was one of the first areas of biology to develop. In natural history, whole organisms are studied in an attempt to make sense of the order of nature. When the natural histories of plants and animals are considered in a context of how each affects the other and their environment, then the biologist's focus is on ecology. Some fields of biology focus on the natural history of living organisms and their interactions within a certain realm of the earth, as in marine biology; others focus on particular aspects of the bodies of living organisms, like their structure (anatomy) or function (physiology). Studies of animals form the field of zoology, whereas the study of plants is called botany. Medicine and the health sciences apply biology to understanding disease and to improving health. Many of the academic disciplines that make up biology are listed at the bottom of this article along with a brief description. Further information about each is provided through links to other articles within Citizendium that can be accessed by clicking each discipline's name. Example.jpg

The development of biology

For more information, see: History of biology.

The rest of this article explores selected themes in biology while giving a short overview of the development of the science. Those themes center on the origin of life (both 'life on earth' and the creation of a new infant) and are followed through the centuries from ancient Greece to contemporary times. It is apparent that a philosophy of critical thinking, the use of investigative methods that rely on empirical evidence, and the availability of technological tools have, in combination, accounted for how these ideas have changed. The development of biology has drawn on many more topics, and a much larger geographical area than referred to here, but, as outlined below, the science of biology has had a continuous thread through the centuries that began with the ancient Greek philosophers, advanced in Europe during the Enlightenment, and matured during the Nineteenth and Twentienth Centuries with widespread investigations performed according to the scientific method. The next section gives a sample of that development to illustrate some of the features of its winding course.


Biology in the Ancient World

Whether foragers or farmers, hunters or herders, people have always depended on plants and animals for sustenance, and turned their thoughts to food. Paleolithic cave paintings show that careful observations of prey have been expressed for at least tens of millennia. Human interest in food is not limited to passive considerations. Rather than take sustenance simply as found, we generally carry food items from place to place, and process them in various ways. At some point interactions with certain plants, and their seeds, became planned and In neolithic times, agriculture became established in many human societies. When intellectual consideration of what plants are was combined with evidence-based experiments used to understand their growth, then botany, the science of plants, joined agriculture as a human endeavor (see Early Biology and the Establishment of the Scientific Method).

The beginnings of Anatomy and Zoology both date back at least to the Fourth Century BC, and the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle. In the first known book that discusses how life in the womb begins, Aristotle suggested that the woman provides the substance needed to build a new baby while the man provides the essence that gives this substance its humanity; he thought that menstrual blood and semen were the female and male contributions to a new life. Aristotle used logic and observation to arrive at his theory, which, in the main, was still accepted 2000 years later. His conclusion that the woman's portion was the mere soil for the man's seed, and that the man's donation supplied the essential humanity that simply required a nurturing womb to grow in, was probably influenced by the assumption, in his society, that women were less highly developed than men. It might also have come from examining the seeds of some trees, where the entire immature plant is contained within the husk, and springs into independent life as a young tree once planted. A popular idea that grew out of Aristotle's musings was that sperm contained a perfect miniature version of the new baby - a homunculus.

The writings of the Greek scholars were preserved and cherished by the Romans, who added literature on the structure and function of animal and human bodies. Galen, who was one of the most noted physicians in Rome, performed public dissection and vivisection of animals and tried to explain human illness from his findings. His writings in Latin survived the fall of Rome, and they formed a basis for the continuing advance of medicine in the East.

Medieval Europe and the Arab World

With the Fall of Rome, the Greek and Roman works became marginalized in Europe. Only a few texts were preserved, and few people could read them - both the literature and the readers often cloistered together in religious orders. The University of Padua was one of the unusual places in the West where organized learning continued, and later, Padua became one of the seats of the Enlightenment. Arab writers, in contrast, preserved and continued the work that had been established in the Roman empire. Copies of the old manuscripts and new books of empirically derived medical procedures and theory were produced. Later, with the invasion of the Moors into Europe, these books became available to scholars there.

Early Biology : The European Renaissance and the 'Scientific Method'

When the authority of classic authors (such as Aristotle and Galen) and of religious doctrine (such as the teachings of the medieval Catholic Church) on the nature of living things began to be questioned in light of actual observation and experiment, the scientific method became established. Paradoxically, some of the impetus to scorn the conventional teachings of Galen came about when "the medical scholars of the first half of the 16th century had returned to reading Galen in the original Greek. They emphasized his superiority over his later interpreters, stressing his learning and the centrality of anatomy in his view of medicine. Vesalius, while openly contemptuous of Galen, followed his advice and methodology to produce a new anatomy of the human body."[1]

By the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century, the advantages of firm empirical evidence instead of the opinions of authorities were advocated by such influential writers as Francis Bacon in England, and Girolamo Fabrici of Italy. Rather than memorize the texts of Galen, or perform ritual sorts of dissections as homage to Galen's findings, the anatomy and physiology of animals began to be carefully explored in completely new directions. The early European biologists followed structures like nerves and veins that travelled between organs and analyzed their findings in an attempt to find general principles of the organization and function of the body. Theories in biology were still very preliminary, but the evidence for ideas that explained an order to living things revolutionized thinking in biology.

The Englishman William Harvey studied how embryos develop by observations of hens' eggs and by dissecting pregnant deer and other mammals. He speculated that development proceeded from one to another of the fetal forms he found, imagining that each of these forms was a stage in a continuous process. Although other of his experiments famously revealed the circulation of the blood, and identified the workings of the heart as pump, when it came to early development he was stymied for any kind of rational explanation. He could not understand how discrete organs in the developing fetus could form out of the amorphous materials in the just pregnant womb or newly fertile egg. He chose a spiritual rather than a mechanistic explanation, postulating that the soul of the new individual was derived from the placement of sperm in the female tract, invoking the gist of the old Aristotlean argument. Still, he modified Aristotle's explanation by insisting that the male and female contributions were equally important. He refuted the notion that the fetus is made up by the specific materials contributed by the male, that grow because of the separate materials contributed by the female. Instead, he argued that "the material out of which the chick is formed in the egg is made at the same time it is formed" and that "out of the same material from which it is made, it is also nourished"[2]

The Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: seeing the links between lifeforms

As detailed examination of plant and animal species became common, and the knowledge was shared among people working in many different parts of the world, similar structures were recognized in many different species. In the Eighteenth Century, the Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus proposed a way of systematically classifying all living things. His method gives a unique name to each kind of plant and animal, and organizes them in a way that stresses similarities of physical features - based on their comparative anatomy. This naming system is still used today, and each known species has one unique name that biologists all over the world recognize. The name has two parts: genus and species, the two most refined categories in the classification scheme. The language of these names is Latin, which was the common written language of scholars in Europe in Linnaeus' time.

Although this systematic classification of living things became widely accepted, at first it did not include the idea that all living things were somehow related. For more than a hundred years after, even highly educated thinkers assumed that complicated life forms (such as mice) could spring to life from a setting of inaminate objects (such as old rags and bread crumbs left in a dark corner). In the Nineteenth Century, experiments of Louis Pasteur of France showed that this commonly held notion, spontaneous generation, was a fallacy. His life's work in bacteriology, along with the later work of the German physician Robert Koch, was important in establishing the germ theory of disease. That work helped bring the traditional practice of Medicine into the health sciences and establish a scientific basis for the field of public health.

Charles Darwin built on the idea of natural selection as a way to explain how different life forms might have common patterns of form. His observations of the variations of animal life on remote islands led him to postulate that individual creatures might thrive, or die, according to how well their characteristics fitted their immediate habitat. In this way, certain inherited features might become more or less pronounced in a species over generations, and entirely new species might eventually arise. His theories became incorporated into the theory of evolution which suggests that all present living things descended from past living things. The existence of common ancestors would account for similar body forms among descendents, and provided a plausible basis for the wide-spread existence of patterns of very similar features among groups of living things: the very patterns that Linnaeus had used to formulate his categories in classification. This idea was not entirely new, but previous proponents were stymied by the question of how such incredibly diverse life forms might come about in the few thousand years that the world was thought to have existed. By Darwin's time, advances in Earth Science had found evidence that the earth was millions of years older than had been previously suspected. Acceptance of this magnitude of time scale among scientists made the idea of incremental change over generations a more reasonable possibilty. Evolutionary change from ancient life was accepted by biologists as a theory that explained both the diversity of life forms and the existence of patterns of common features.

By the second half of the Nineteenth Century the Austrian monk Gregor Mendel's work on the inheritance of traits had produced a working statistical model that included an equal weight of the contribution of both the male and female parent among its assumptions. This egalatarian view was likely aided by the fact that his primary subjects were garden peas, rather than men and women. Instead of a vague blending of the characteristics of parents in offspring, Mendel considered discrete traits of each individual to be based on a sort of binary system of alleles that coded for the quality of each one of them. The surface of a pea might be wrinkled or smooth, for example, and the particular pair of alleles inherited by the young sprout determined the exact contour of the surface of the peas it would produce when mature. Additional Mendelian assumptions involved the idea that these alleles might be either dominant or recessive. Put together, these assumptions allowed Mendel to correctly predict the number of offspring that would have each characteristic, and with this system, the field of genetics began.

Technology advances Biology

First Glimpses of the Microscopic World

The advance of biological thinking depended on the communication of these ideas, and also on technology. Even the communication of ideas in science has depended on technology; in a sense, the printing press was an invention that facilitated the Enlightenment, and today, electronic communication has accelerated the rate of progress. The availability of technical tools for experimentation has in a large part determined the course of progress.

The features of plants and animals, for example, have been understood on an entirely different levels with technological advances that provided new ways to study them. The microscope, modified by Antoni van Leeuwenhoek in the Seventeenth Century, revealed details of structure in the bodies of organisms that had never before been even suspected. That amorphous material that Harvey could not fathom as the progenitor of organs might have seemed to him to be of a wholly different nature had he the advantage of magnification. One of the new sights that van Leeuwenhoek described were individual ovum and spermatozoa. Being familiar with the theories of Aristotle, and their popular interpretation, he reported that he could actually see homunculi in the heads of the living sperm - an example of even a great scientist perceiving his expectations, rather than what was really there. Science is always influenced by past ideas. No scientist can consider any hypothesis, or analyze any set of experiemental results without using his or her mind, and all the blinkers and biases that come with it - however hard the good scientist tries to shake free and be rational and objective, that mind is both consciously and unconsciously stamped with the culture that produced it.

File:Drawing of sperm by van Leeuwenhoek showing homunculus.jpg

Not only was the structure of flesh and plants seen in new detail with the microscope, but new types of organisms were also revealed: micro-organisms that could not be detected with the naked eye. [3] And so, like all important technological advances in biology, the microsocope led to new ideas about living things. It was realised that tissues were composed of cells, the field of microbiology was born, and the ground was prepared for the germ theory of disease, an idea that helped bring the traditional practice of western medicine (sometimes called allopathy) into the field of health science and modern medicine.

Further developments led to the modern compound microscope by the end of the 19th century, with much higher resolution. Cytology included studies of dividing cells, and the chromosomes of the nucleus became recognized as containing the genetic material that lay behind Mendel's laws of inheritance of traits.

Eventually, in the 20th century, electron microscopes were built that could reveal the structure of cells at a magnification of tens of thousands of times. Science differs from religious and political doctrine in at least one major manner – tenets are not to be held sacred forever, but are always there to be questioned and tested. This has proved damaging for many of them, including the homunculus theory of fetal development. With improved optics and the new imaging techniques of scanning and transmission electron microscopes, that "little man" inside the sperm cell vanished forever.

magnified human sperm cells

Cell Biology begins

With ultra-high power examination of cells, another new discipline within biology began to flourish; the field of cell biology began to unravel the inner architecture of cells, discovering discrete organelles that could only be seen well at high magnification. Closer examination of the structure of the cell was combined with the ability to physically separate out the components of the cells in bulk by weight and chemical properties and analyze each fraction using methods from biochemistry and biophysics. The important techniques that allowed this analysis include ultracentrifugation and gel electrophoresis.

Molecular biology, and a revolution in understanding

In the Twentieth Century, the properties and the roles of some of the very large molecules found in living things were examined. Proteins were found to have complex three-dimensional structures that not only were important for making up physical structures, but often included specialized sites able to catalyze the chemical reactions that broke down food molecules and provided energy for metabolism.

By 1953, the meticulous x-ray studies of Rosalind Franklin allowed the imagination of James Watson and Francis Crick to seize upon the structure of DNA. Publication of the double helix structure of that molecule in 1953 immediately provided a schema for how information might be coded through the generations, and serve as a template for the synthesis of a related molecule, RNA. Crick and others went on to propose that small RNA molecules might serve as adaptors that could be made from such a template, or an intermediate form, and used to assemble the amino acids of proteins.

With these advances in organic chemistry, biochemistry and molecular biology, a new view of the origin of life forms on earth emerged. "It is now widely believed that almost four billion years ago, before the first living cells, life consisted of assemblies of self-reproducing macromolecules".[4]

Understanding the ultrastructure of cells along with correlated chemical and physical properties of the organelles brought more new ideas to biology. Mitochondria, those compartmentalized seats of oxidative phosphorylation, the complicated chemical process that produced high energy compounds from the breakdown of food molecules with the cell, were found to have their own DNA - and its form was that of bacteria rather than mammalian cells. The novel concept that at least some organelles might be the descendants of ancestral 'hitch-hikers' was conceived,

Studying the biochemistry of RNA and proteins involved purifying unstable compounds from sources that also contained enzymes for their breakdown. Unravelling the movement of RNA out of the nucleus to the endoplasmic reticulum and ribosomes, and pinpointing the mechanics of how proteins were assembled in the cell, were heroic enterprises requiring marathon experiments. Work advanced, but, in the main, success required labor-intensive manipulations without substantial periods of delay. DNA is much more stable, and with DNA chemistry, biologists could take off their parkas and come out of the refrigerated cold rooms. By the last part of the Twentieth Century, the technique of PCR allowed experiments on tiny samples of DNA to be done in many ordinary laboratories, and progress in molecular biology accelerated.

Studying the organelles that had been discovered through electron microscopy led to some startling new concepts: the mitochondria in active human cells were not really human at all, at least not in origin. These organelles had been assimilated into eukaryotic cells and divided along with them, but according to their own genetic code, a circular strand of DNA that resembles the genome of bacteria. These energy-producing organelles of animal cells were not the only organelles found that derived from a different life form; the chloroplasts of plant cells are another.

The age-old question of how a new baby came to be born of man and woman took equally unexpected turns. The single cell that every human begins with does not receive identical types of genetic contributions from mother and father. One of the biggest differences between what each parent gives their baby was found to do with what’s in the egg, but not in the sperm, and that would be cell organelles, specifically mitochondria. Each individual human being is made up of cells with mother's mitochondria only, including the mitochondrial DNA.

Imprinting of genes by parental origin another assymetry that had been unsuspected. Some parental genes were found to be marked in the germ cells (egg and sperm) to be either active or inactive in the new embryo, by the addition of chemical modifiers to the DNA. The suspicions of Aristotle turned out to have an oddly co-incident basis in genetics after all, but in the opposite way to that imagined by the ancients. "Genes expressed from the paternally inherited copy generally increase resource transfer to the child, whereas maternally expressed genes reduce it." [5] In other words, the genetic material provided by the father has a role slanted to provide nourishment to the fetus. The same genes, when inherited through the nucleus of the egg rather than that of the sperm, act differently. The placenta nourishes the new infant from the mother's womb - but it's the father's genes that are more important for its success in obtaining nutrients.

The continuing story

With all the advances that have been made in the study of living things, biology remains a science that has only begun to provide a basis for understanding life.

Etymology

The word 'Biology' is formed by combining two Greek words βίος (bios), meaning 'life', and λόγος (logos), meaning 'study of'. "Biology" in its modern use was probably introduced independently by both Gottfried Reinhold Treviranus (Biologie oder Philosophie der lebenden Natur, 1802) and by Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (Hydrogéologie, 1802). Although the word 'Biology' is sometimes said to have been coined in 1800 by Karl Friedrich Burdach, it appears in the title of Volume 3 of Michael Christoph Hanov's Philosophiae naturalis sive physicae dogmaticae: Geologia, biologia, phytologia generalis et dendrologia, published in 1766.


Main topics and discoveries

For more information, see: List of biology topics, History of plant systematics, History of zoology, post-Darwin, and History of zoology (before Darwin).
For more information, see: History of molecular biology and Timeline of biology and organic chemistry.

Major discoveries in biology include:

For more information, see: List of biology disciplines.

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References

Citations
  1. Nutton V (2002) Portraits of science. Logic, learning, and experimental medicine.[see comment]. Science 295:800-1 UI 11823624
  2. (Van Speybroeck L, De Waele D, Van de Vijver G (2002) Theories in early embryology: close connections between epigenesis, preformationism, and self-organization. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 981:7-49 UI 12547672).
  3. Anton van Leeuwenhoek. Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols. Gale Research, 1998. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2006
  4. Taylor WR. (2005) Stirring the primordial soup. Nature 434:705 UI 15815609)
  5. Constancia M, Kelsey G, Reik W (2004) Resourceful imprinting. Nature 432:53-7 UI 15525980
Further reading

The Evolution of Darwinism: Selection, Adaptation and Progress in Evolutionary Biology. Timothy Shanahan. Cambridge University Press, New York, 2004. 342 pp. (ISBN 0521834139 cloth)

Selected external links

The following links have been reviewed and are recommended because, at the time of their inclusion, they provided accurate information and portals to additional excellent web resources. Many other excellent links have been omitted through no fault of their own.

Plain and technical language