Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_G - Genetic Engineering

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 162    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Genetic Engineering:     more books (100)
  1. Tomorrow's Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food by Pamela C. Ronald, R. W. Adamchak, 2010-01-08
  2. Genetic Algorithms and Engineering Design by Mitsuo Gen, Runwei Cheng, 1997-01-07
  3. Genetic Engineering: Dreams and Nightmares by Enzo Russo, David Cove, 1998-05-14
  4. Molecular Biology and Genetic Engineering of Yeasts by Henri Heslot, Claude Gaillardin, 1991-12-27
  5. Cloning and Genetic Engineering (Life in the Future) by Holly Cefrey, 2002-09
  6. Genetic Engineering of Mesenchymal Stem Cells
  7. Playing God?: Human Genetic Engineering and the Rationalization of Public Bioethical Debate (Morality and Society Series) by John H. Evans, 2002-02-01
  8. Engineering Genetic Circuits (Chapman & Hall/CRC Mathematical & Computational Biology) by Chris J. Myers, 2009-07-14
  9. The Frankenstein Syndrome: Ethical and Social Issues in the Genetic Engineering of Animals (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and Public Policy) by Bernard E. Rollin, 1995-06-30
  10. The Ethics of Genetic Engineering (Routledge Annals of Bioethics) by Roberta M. Berry, 2007-10-03
  11. Redesigning Humans: Our Inevitable Genetic Future by Gregory Stock, 2002-06-15
  12. The Champion Maker by Kevin Joseph, 2007-02-07
  13. Genetic Engineering: Modern Progress or Future Peril? (USA Today's Debate: Voices and Perspectives) by Linda Tagliaferro, 2009-09
  14. Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering (Global Issues) by Kathy Wilson Peacock, 2010-05

41. Genetic Engineering Campaign Home: Greenpeace USA
genetic engineering, genetic engineering Think you're not eatinggenetically engineered food? Think again. Thousands of products
http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/ge/ge.htm
Think you're not eating genetically engineered food? Think again. Thousands of products on supermarket shelves are made with genetically modified organisms (GMOs).Companies that have fouled the planet with toxic chemicals are now manufacturing genetically modified food, which poses irreversible threats of biological pollution and a host of other risks. Get answers to frequently asked questions about GMOs
U.S. Wheat Farmers Launch Legal Petition to Stop Introduction of GE Wheat
U.S. wheat farmers - concerned that deregulation of Monsanto's genetically engineered Roundup Ready Wheat could bring economic, environmental and social damages - have filed a legal petition calling for immediate action by Anne Veneman, U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary, and the Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS).
Greenpeace's True Food Network Demands an End to GE Food in Supermarkets
Since the True Food Network's victory in November 2001 in which Trader Joe's agreed to use non-GMO ingredients in its store brand products, it has been focusing its Supermarket Campaign on Shaw's/Star Markets and Safeway. Read about the the Network's latest action against Shaw's.
CSAs: An Alternative To GE Produce
One way to avoid gentically engineered food is to buy organic. But buying Certified Organic produce and products at your local supermarket can be both expensive and limiting, especially when they don't carry what you want or need. Fortunately, options are available and they're closer to you than you think!

42. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries

http://library.advanced.org/19697/
Welcome to the ThinkQuest Internet Challenge of Entries
The web site you have requested, Views on Cloning and Genetic Engineering: Improving on Nature or Popping the Genie’s Cork? , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to Views on Cloning and Genetic Engineering: Improving on Nature or Popping the Genie’s Cork? click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ...
Views on Cloning and Genetic Engineering: Improving on Nature or Popping the Genie’s Cork?
click here to view this site
A ThinkQuest Internet Challenge 1998 Entry
Click image for the Site Awards Received
  • Fourth Place
Languages : Site Desciption This web site provides information on the controversial issue of genetic cloning. The site explains what cloning is by focusing on the birth of Dolly, the lamb that was cloned by Scottish scientists in 1997. The site explains the cell and what scientists must do to clone it. Explore reactions to cloning from politicians, lawmakers, and scientists. What do you think?
Students Dave Yale Secondary School
Canada Richard Rift Valley Academy
Kenya Katie Langley Secondary School
Canada Coaches John Willoughby Elementary
Canada David Mugumu High School
Kenya

43. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
Improving nature or uncorking the genie? Information and debate positions, both for and against.
http://library.thinkquest.org/19697/
Welcome to the ThinkQuest Internet Challenge of Entries
The web site you have requested, Views on Cloning and Genetic Engineering: Improving on Nature or Popping the Genie’s Cork? , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to Views on Cloning and Genetic Engineering: Improving on Nature or Popping the Genie’s Cork? click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ...
Views on Cloning and Genetic Engineering: Improving on Nature or Popping the Genie’s Cork?
click here to view this site
A ThinkQuest Internet Challenge 1998 Entry
Click image for the Site Awards Received
  • Fourth Place
Languages : Site Desciption This web site provides information on the controversial issue of genetic cloning. The site explains what cloning is by focusing on the birth of Dolly, the lamb that was cloned by Scottish scientists in 1997. The site explains the cell and what scientists must do to clone it. Explore reactions to cloning from politicians, lawmakers, and scientists. What do you think?
Students Dave Yale Secondary School
Canada Richard Rift Valley Academy
Kenya Katie Langley Secondary School
Canada Coaches John Willoughby Elementary
Canada David Mugumu High School
Kenya

44. The Turning Point Project
Nonprofit publishing a series of educational advertisements on the major issues of the new millennium (extinction, genetic engineering, industrial agriculture, globalisation, technomania ) in the New York Times.
http://www.turnpoint.org/
Visit the Technomania page for more information and to view other ads in this series.
This is ad number twenty three in a series of ads running weekly in The New York Times . As the ads run, they will be posted on this website in PDF format for viewing.
Welcome to the Turning Point Project
The Turning Point Project is a non-profit organization, formed in 1999 specifically to design and produce a series of educational advertisements concerning the major issues of the new millennium. The ads appeared in The New York Times and other newspapers across the nation. The issues discussed in the ads will be crucial in determining the quality of life on Earth in the near and distant future. Despite this, they have not been given the in-depth coverage in the major media that they deserve.
Signers of the ads are part of a coalition of nearly 100 non-profit organizations that favor democratic, localized, and ecologically sustainable alternatives to current practices and policies.
View or download the advertisements!

45. An Alien's View Of Life On Earth
Advertising, globalization, immigration, and corporations induce us to work too much to the detriment of family life, and combined with genetic engineering this urge to produce more could result in humans becoming almost robotic workers.
http://reviews.20m.com
Cheap Web Site Hosting
An Alein's View of Life on Earth
If you think you live on a perfect planet, Welcome to Earth.
If you see trends that may dehumanize us, Read On.
Topics
Overworked
Globalization
Immigration
Genetic Engineering ...
Comments
Recognize anyone?
"The time has come", the walrus said,
"To speak of many things,
Of work weeks and trading pacts,
Of immigrants and rings."
Our society suffers from too much stress and too much work. The solution is not simple a convergence of forces stress us and give us meager control over how much we work. This site illuminates some of the force vectors contributing to our stress and overwork. By understanding these forces, just maybe, we can find a solution. Here we provide a forum to discuss and search for answers. Abique Inc., the sponsor of this site does not propose or have a solution to the problems ruining our families, decaying our culture, and denying us the human bliss modern technology should have provided.

46. Wired 8.04: Why The Future Doesn't Need Us.
Article on how technologies, including robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech, are threatening to make humans an endangered species.
http://www.wirednews.com/wired/archive/8.04/joy_pr.html

Issue 8.04
- Apr 2000
Why the future doesn't need us.
Our most powerful 21st-century technologies - robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech - are threatening to make humans an endangered species.
By Bill Joy From the moment I became involved in the creation of new technologies, their ethical dimensions have concerned me, but it was only in the autumn of 1998 that I became anxiously aware of how great are the dangers facing us in the 21st century. I can date the onset of my unease to the day I met Ray Kurzweil, the deservedly famous inventor of the first reading machine for the blind and many other amazing things. Ray and I were both speakers at George Gilder's Telecosm conference, and I encountered him by chance in the bar of the hotel after both our sessions were over. I was sitting with John Searle, a Berkeley philosopher who studies consciousness. While we were talking, Ray approached and a conversation began, the subject of which haunts me to this day. I had missed Ray's talk and the subsequent panel that Ray and John had been on, and they now picked right up where they'd left off, with Ray saying that the rate of improvement of technology was going to accelerate and that we were going to become robots or fuse with robots or something like that, and John countering that this couldn't happen, because the robots couldn't be conscious. While I had heard such talk before, I had always felt sentient robots were in the realm of science fiction. But now, from someone I respected, I was hearing a strong argument that they were a near-term possibility. I was taken aback, especially given Ray's proven ability to imagine and create the future. I already knew that new technologies like genetic engineering and nanotechnology were giving us the power to remake the world, but a realistic and imminent scenario for intelligent robots surprised me.

47. Genetic Engineering Network
The UK genetic engineering Network (GEN) is an information sharing network for anyone actively campaignin Category Society Issues Biotechnology Genetics Activism......genetic engineering Networks homepage. Learn more about genetic engineeringand what you can do to stop it. Includes information
http://www.geneticsaction.org.uk/
Welcome to the all new, redesigned Genetic Engineering Network web site. We've simplified the look and feel and chucked out some stuff that didn't seem to be serving any useful purpose. Hopefully all the good stuff's still there, but if anything important's gone AWOL then please let us know
The Genetic Engineering Network is a network of people opposed to the imposition of GM technology. All over the world, people are campaigning against genetically modified food, human and animal genetic engineering, and the bio-tech companies who are increasing their control over our lives and our environment. GEN includes local campaign and action groups NGOs, direct activists, and individuals campaigning against genetic engineering. The movement is diverse, exciting and growing all the time. GEN aims to support, link and publicise all parts of it. The GEN web site includes numerous resources for people wanting to oppose genetic engineering, or just to learn more. Resources on the site include: Message delivered to DEFRA on Wednesday 24 July 2002, over 150 people held a colourful and peaceful demonstration at the Governments Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) in London. They left large bags of GM crops from trial sites around Britain at the entrance.

48. Hair Loss, Hair Cloning, Hair Transplantation, Hair Multiplication And Hair Loss
Scientific information on the cloning and genetic engineering of human hair plus updates on various aspects of male pattern baldness. News and discussion forum.
http://www.clonemyhair.com
Home News BookStore Photos ... HairAid.com > CloneMyHair.com Monday, April 7, 2003
Main Page
Forum Main Page Search Forum New Messages ... Contact
Real Before and After!
Hair Loss Portal of New Generation Last edited by Admin: Apr 3, 2003 1.35 a.m.
Sections updated: Hair Transplantation Links Photo Bank News
Site Status: Very Active New Voting Poll. Please Vote!
Enter your e-mail to join our Hair Cloning Updates mailing list!
TV report on hair cloning
Cyclic hair loss in mice
See actual photos
FDA info on Avodart Take Hair Quiz Check new posts and leave yours Newest In Hair Loss And Hair Cloning Upcoming event: Society of investigative dermatology meeting, Apr 29- May 4, 2003 (.pdf) Avodart (Dutasteride) is available now in pharmacies in the US (click for pricing) ... Hair storage by Hairogenics (Consumer alert!) Hair Cloning In Mexico (Attention: non-verified report!) Detailed Illustration of Follicle Transplantation performed in Gho Clinic TV report on hair cloning on CBS News4 Miami (Note: QuickTime pluging is required) Dutasteride. Our updated page on dutasteride.

49. Ethics And Genetic Engineering
A Response to the Department of the Environment's Consultation Paper Genetically Modified Organisms Category Society Philosophy Bioethics genetic engineering......Ethics and genetic engineering. This paper will attempt to address someof the ethical issues involved in genetic engineering. Part I.
http://www.voice.buz.org/genetic_engineering/ethicsandge.html
Ethics and Genetic Engineering A Response to the Department of the Environment's Consultation Paper - Genetically Modified Organisms and the Environment on behalf of VOICE (Voice Of Irish Concern for the Environment) Contents Introduction Introduction In January 1998 the Minister for the Environment promised that his department would shortly publish a consultation paper on genetic engineering. The document entitled Genetically Modified Organisms and the Environment finally appeared in August 1998. It purports to be an objective, even-handed document, explaining what genetic engineering is and outlining the national and European Union regulations governing the release of genetically engineered organisms or the sale of genetically engineered food. However, as many in the NGO (non-governmental organisation) community feared when the "consultation" process was announced the document is heavily weighted in favour of the biotech industry's point of view. They have defined the debate in their terms and therefore it is very difficult for those who come from a very different perspective to engage in a genuine debate at this point. The fears and anxieties which have arisen as a result of the biotechnology revolution were accurately captured in a joint statement by Minister Dempsey and his colleague, Joe Walsh T.D., present Minister for Agriculture while in opposition on April 26th, 1997. They argued that "it is premature to release genetically modified organisms into the environment or to market food which contain any genetically modified ingredient..." The reason for such a stand was very simple "Fianna Fail will not support what amounts to the largest nutritional experiment in human history with the consumer as guinea pig".

50. Genetic Engineering News
genetic engineering News Indexed in EMBASE, Excerpta Medicia Managing Editor JohnSterling Visit our genetic engineering News web site for more information.
http://www.liebertpub.com/GEN/default.asp
Over 20 Years as the Leading Publishers in the Field of Biotechnology Advertising Info
ISSN: 0270-6377
21 Issues Annually
Genetic Engineering News You may subscribe below:
Select Subscription Rate: 2003 USA Print Institutional $579.00 2003 Outside USA Print Institutional $675.00
Indexed in EMBASE, Excerpta Medicia
Managing Editor John Sterling
Visit our
Genetic Engineering News web site for more information. If you are interested in this title you may be interested in:
ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies

Cell Preservation Technology

DNA and Cell Biology
Human Gene Therapy ... Advertising Info

51. Creatures Developer Resource
Information on developing third party applications and genetic engineering. Useful addon utilities.
http://www.double.co.nz/creatures
CDR
The Creatures Developer Resource
Last Updated on 18/02/2003
No more updates. A brief goodbye. I'm still around, still doing the odds bit of Creatures stuff. Lately I've been busy with non-Creatures stuff, running two Rhee Taekwondo clubs. Hoping to get back to working on my utilities in the near future. Thanks for all your email asking about me! Genetics Editor source code available. Source code to C3 Lobe Study program now available. Program updates and more source code available. Update on future changes.
Welcome to the Creatures Developer Resource. This site is intended to share as much information as I have been able to find out about the technical side of the Creatures games. In particular, development of third party software that interfaces with Creatures and the internals of Norn brains. Most of the information on this site is valid for both Creatures 1 and Creatures 2 Topics of Interest:
What's New
Information on the latest changes to this site.
Creatures 3 Utilities and Information
Some programs and information for Creatures 3.

52. GeneWatch - Ethics And Risks Of Genetic Engineering
Concerned with the ethics and risks of genetic engineering. Fact sheets, publications and a database Category Society Issues Biotechnology Genetics Activism......GeneWatch is an independent organisation concerned withthe ethics and risks of genetic engineering.
http://www.genewatch.org/
Have your say in the GM debate.... Click the button on the left.... Home Page Gene Futures Conference 2003
Debating the Use of GM Crops and Foods in the UK
Environment Minister, Michael Meacher, pledges redress for GM harm to organic and conventional crops.

Click the Gene Futures button on the left to view speeches, articles, etc. Have your say in the GM Public Debate
Do you want the Government to allow GM crops to be grown commercially in the UK? GeneWatch UK is a public interest group which aims to ensure that genetic technologies are developed and used in the public interest and in a way which promotes human health, protects the environment and respects human rights and the interests of animals. Regulating Human Genetic Tests: Ten Key Questions
The Human Genetics Commission will soon publish its advice to Government on the regulation of health-related genetic tests.
GeneWatch UK suggests 10 key questions we should be asking.

53. News On Genetic Engineering 1996/97
News on genetic engineering 1996/97. Nachrichten in deutsch finden Sie hier. SaveOrganic Standards!!! 1228-97 Gov't not to require labeling genetic engineering.
http://www.netlink.de/gen/Zeitung/home.html
News on Genetic Engineering 1996/97
Nachrichten in deutsch finden Sie hier 1998 news are here New board to advise EU on ethics of biotechnology 12-29-97 SOS!!! Save Organic Standards!!! Gov't not to require labeling genetic engineering ... More informations

54. Welcome To Cloning Around! Cloning Around (c) 1987-2002 David Scott MacLachlan -
Cartoons about clones, creatures, critters and mutations who have escaped from a genetic engineering research laboratory, and the slightly mad scientist who created them. By Dave MacLachlan.
http://www.CloningAround.com
Cartoons about clones, creatures, monsters and mutations who have escaped from a genetic engineering research laboratory and the Slightly Miffed Scientists who created them. Cloning Around " started life in the late 1980's as your typical "Genetic mutations escape from a college biochemistry laboratory" campus newspaper cartoon strip. It originally followed the standard three or four panel format, but over the years it has since mutated into a single panel cartoon for the most part. Every now and then it regresses to a multiple panel version. The characters aren't based on any particular person, they're just products of an especially fevered imagination. What would start out as random doodles would eventually take on a life of their own, becoming Clyde, Prof. Arnbuckle, The Sock Monster, et al. As you will notice, bad puns run rampant throughout the strip. Guilty as charged - but, I remain unre pun tant ;) If you find that there's a particular cartoon that you truly like, and want a hardcopy version of it for framing, or for using as the centerpiece for a dartboard, please contact me at Dave@CloningAround.com

55. ICGEB Biosafety Home Page
International Centre for genetic engineering and Biotechnology. BiosafetyWeb Pages. There is a need for further development of internationally
http://www.icgeb.org/biosafety/
International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
Biosafety Web Pages
"There is a need for further development of internationally agreed principles on risk assessment and management of all aspects of biotechnology, which should build upon those developed at the national level. Only when adequate and transparent safety and border-control procedures are in place will the community at large be able to derive maximum benefit from, and be in a much better position to accept the potential benefits and risks of, biotechnology". (Agenda 21, 16.29) About Biosafety ICGEB Biosafety Databases Library

56. Embracing Change With All Four Arms
This paper sets out to defend human genetic engineering with a new bioethical approach, posthumanism.
http://www.changesurfer.com/Hlth/Genetech.html
Changesurfer Radio World Transhumanist Association "Democratic Transhumanism"
Embracing Change with All Four Arms: A Post-Humanist Defense of Genetic Engineering
J. Hughes Ph.D. (e-mail) jhughes@changesurfer.com published: in Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics June 1996, 6(4):94-101 in Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial Issues in Science, Technology, and Society , Fourth Edition, ed. Thomas A. Easton. Dushkin/McGraw Hill, 2000 translated into German in Telepolis 1. Introduction 2. Distinctions without a Difference 3. Ethical Starting Points for A Defense ... Bibliography
Abstract
This paper sets out to defend human genetic engineering with a new bioethical approach, post-humanism, combined with a radical democratic political framework. Arguments for the restriction of human genetic engineering, and specifically germ-line enhancement, are reviewed. Arguments are divided into those which are fundamental matters of faith, or "bio-Luddite" arguments, and those which can be addressed through public policy, or "gene-angst" arguments. The four bio-Luddite concerns addressed are: Medicine Makes People Sick; There are Sacred Limits of the Natural Order; Technologies Always Serve Ruling Interests; The Genome is Too Complicated to Engineer. I argue that these are matters of faith that one either accepts or rejects, and that I reject.

57. EGE InfoNet
Egyptian genetic engineering information network has information on databases, events and available publications.
http://www.geocities.com/egeinfonet/

58. Tree Genetic Engineering Research Cooperative Homepage
The goal of the Tree genetic engineering Research Cooperative (TGERC) is toconduct research, technology transfer, and education to facilitate use of
http://www.fsl.orst.edu/tgerc/

TGERC Profile
Recent Updates For more information about the TGERC, please contact: Dr. Steve Strauss Director,
Dept.of Forest Science, Oregon State University,
Corvallis, Oregon 97331-5752,
phone: 1 541 737 6578, fax: 1 541 737 1393,
email: steve.strauss@orst.edu
Dr. Rick Meilan
, Associate Director, phone: 1 541 737 6097, fax: 1 541 737 1393 email: richard.meilan@orst.edu

59. Greenpeace International : Genetic Engineering
Information and news about the worldwide antiGE campaign and press releases.
http://www.greenpeace.org/~geneng/index.html

60. PRINCIPLES OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
Explains the basic concepts with some background on genetics and genetic engineering to transfer desired traits. Includes a glossary of trade words and their meanings.
http://warp.nal.usda.gov/bic/Education_res/iastate.info/bio1.html
PRINCIPLES OF BIOTECHNOLOGY Biotechnology Information Series (Bio-1) North Central Regional Extension Publication Iowa State University - University Extension Biotechnology Defined
Biotechnology can be broadly defined as "using living organisms or their products for commercial purposes." As such, biotechnology has been practiced by human society since the beginning of recorded history in such activities as baking bread, brewing alcoholic beverages, or breeding food crops or domestic animals. A narrower and more specific definition of biotechnology is "the commercial application of living organisms or their products, which involves the deliberate manipulation of their DNA molecules" (see glossary for definitions of bold-print words). This definition implies a set of laboratory techniques developed within the last 20 years that have been responsible for the tremendous scientific and commercial interest in biotechnology, the founding of many new companies, and the redirection of research efforts and financial resources among established companies and universities. These laboratory techniques provide scientists with a spectacular vision of the design and function of living organisms, and provide technologists in many fields with the tools to implement exciting commercial applications. Principles of Biology
All living organisms are composed of cells that contain a substance called DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) in the chromosomes. (See Fig.1.) The structure of DNA molecules contains information that is used by cells as a "recipe" for the organism; that is, the characteristics of any living thing essentially are determined by the information in DNA. The "words" for the DNA recipe, called genes, are derived from a 4-letter alphabet (A, C, G, T) and usually contain between 1,000 and 100,000 letters. The entire recipe, called the genome, may contain between 4 million (simple bacteria) and 3 billion (human) letters or more.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 3     41-60 of 162    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20

free hit counter