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by bkfunk
448 days ago
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Once I started learning more about biology, I realized that everything is just so complex. The body repurposes chemicals a lot, so you have things like serotonin being a key neurotransmitter in the brain, but also in the gut. And you have enzymes that are coded in genes, but then there are also networks of genes that are up- or down- regulated by hundreds of other genes, and sometimes only in certain types of cells or certain physiological environments. And then of course there are epigenetic and immune-modulated effects at the genome, gene network, and individual gene levels. Not to even mention all the feedback mechanisms and meta-feedback mechanisms (the drive toward homeostasis is POWERFUL), and effects of countless chemicals in our environment. There are certainly clear-cut cause-effect relationships in biological systems, but even they will have edge cases and random chance to muddle the picture. I would posit that the human body is far more complex than even the largest codebase, not least because it was jury-rigged together with no architect or style guide. Also, in general, the more common the exposure, the harder it is to find a link; try finding a control group of people who have never been exposed to PTFEs, or HSV, and who also aren’t like hunter gatherers. |
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> It’s more like a vibrating causal cloud than a chain of causality.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38898335