RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
556 results for "gene drive" — page 6 of 28
L_5_16 — Archaeogenetics: Ancient DNA and the Human Past
Archaeogenetics — the extraction and analysis of DNA from ancient human, animal, and plant remains — has transformed our understanding of human history since the field's breakthrough in 2010. Advances in next-generation
L_5_06 — Genetic Adaptation to Disease: Malaria, Plague, TB
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force on the human genome throughout history. Pathogens — particularly malaria, plague, tuberculosis, smallpox, and cholera — have killed more humans than all other
L_5_02 — Genetic Diseases and Founder Effect Populations
When a small group founds a new population and subsequently expands in relative isolation, genetic drift can amplify alleles that were rare in the ancestral population — including deleterious recessive disease alleles. T
L_5_07 — Genetics of Speech and Language: Beyond FOXP2
Language is humanity's most distinctive cognitive ability — and identifying its genetic basis has been a central goal of human genetics and neuroscience since the discovery of the KE family and the FOXP2 gene. The KE fam
P_5_02 — Computational Phylogenetics of Mythology
This document examines Computational Phylogenetics of Mythology, a topic within the Philosophy Meaning research area. Key areas of investigation include The Traditional Approach: Comparative Mythology, The Biological Ana
ZE_5_16 — Climate Change Ethics: Responsibility, Justice, and Future Generations
Climate change ethics addresses the moral dimensions of anthropogenic global warming — a problem characterized by radical asymmetries of cause and effect, temporal scale, and vulnerability. The nations most responsible f
ZE_3_05 — Ethics of Genetic Engineering
The ethics of genetic engineering confronts humanity's growing capacity to alter the genetic code of organisms — including humans — raising questions about the limits of technological intervention in nature, the distinct
ZE_3_17 — CRISPR Ethics: Gene Editing and the Future of Humanity
The development of CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing — demonstrated by Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier in 2012 (Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 2020) — created the most precise, accessible, and affordable tool for modifying
R_4_11 — Regeneration: Axolotl, Planaria, Hydra, and Limb Regrowth
Regeneration — the ability of an organism to regrow lost or damaged body parts — ranges from the routine (skin healing, liver regrowth in humans) to the spectacular: the axolotl (Mexican salamander) can regrow entire lim
R_3_07 — Embryology and Morphogenesis: How Bodies Take Shape
Embryology — the study of how a single fertilized cell becomes a complex multicellular organism — is one of biology's most profound mysteries. From the discovery by Karl Ernst von Baer (1828) that embryos of different sp
R_3_01 — Epigenetics and Ancestral Memory
Epigenetics — heritable changes in gene expression WITHOUT changes to the DNA sequence — has revolutionized biology over the past two decades. Your genes are the hardware; epigenetics is the software that determines whic
R_3_02 — Horizontal Gene Transfer in Complex Life
For decades, the "tree of life" was the central metaphor of evolutionary biology — species branching neatly from common ancestors through vertical gene transmission (parent to offspring). This metaphor is now BROKEN, at
R_3_20 — CRISPR & Gene Editing Technology
CRISPR-Cas9 is the most transformative biological technology since PCR, enabling precise, programmable editing of DNA in virtually any organism. The system was adapted from a bacterial immune defense mechanism first iden
R_3_09 — Molecular Phylogenetics and Tree of Life
Molecular phylogenetics — reconstructing evolutionary relationships from DNA, RNA, and protein sequences — has revolutionized our understanding of the tree of life since Carl Woese's landmark 1977 discovery, using small-
R_3_15 — Epigenetics and Lamarckian Inheritance: Transgenerational Mechanisms Beyond DNA Sequence
Epigenetics — the study of heritable changes in gene expression that occur without alteration to the underlying DNA sequence — has fundamentally reshaped modern biology since the term was coined by Conrad Hal Waddington
R_1_07 — Viruses as Evolutionary Drivers — Endogenous Retroviruses and Genomic Integration
Viruses are not merely disease agents — they are fundamental architects of evolution. The human genome contains approximately ~8% endogenous retroviral (ERV) sequences (~100,000 ERV fragments), meaning roughly eight time
R_1_06 — Symbiogenesis — Lynn Margulis and Cooperative Evolution
Symbiogenesis — the evolutionary origin of new organisms, organelles, or metabolic capabilities through the permanent merger of previously independent life forms — is one of the most consequential biological discoveries
F_1_23 — Genetic Adam & Mitochondrial Eve
"Mitochondrial Eve" and "Y-chromosomal Adam" are the names given to the most recent common ancestors (MRCAs) of all living humans through the exclusively maternal (mitochondrial DNA) and exclusively paternal (Y-chromosom
I_4_04 — UAP Propulsion Theories and Metamaterials
The observed performance characteristics attributed to UAP — instantaneous acceleration, hypersonic speed without sonic booms, apparent anti-gravity hover, and trans-medium travel — would require propulsion physics far b
A_2_11 — Book of Jubilees: Angelic Calendar and Retold Genesis
The Book of Jubilees (also called Leptogenesis or "Little Genesis") is a Second Temple Jewish text (composed c. 160–150 BCE) that retells the narrative of Genesis 1 through Exodus 12 as a revelation dictated to Moses on
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