Chapter 1 Introduction To Biology Lesson 1.1 and 1.7
Chapter 1 Introduction To Biology Lesson 1.1 and 1.7
Chapter 1 Introduction To Biology Lesson 1.1 and 1.7
Global
Warming
Food
shortage
Pollution
organ
system
community population organism
THREE MAJOR DIVISIONS OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES:
Taxonomy – naming and classifying organisms
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Cytology – structures and
functions of cells
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Embryology – function and development of organisms
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Anatomy – structures and parts of organisms
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Physiology – functions of living organisms and their parts
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Biochemistry – biochemical compositions and processes of living things
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Genetics – heredity and variation
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Evolution – origin and differentiation of various organisms
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Ecology – relationships of organisms with each other and their environment
Traditional
Branches of
Biological
Sciences
Bioinformatics – Biological data using computer programs
New
Subdisciplines
in Biology
Genomics – entire genetic material (genome) of an organism
New
Subdisciplines
in Biology
Molecular biology – molecules that make up the cells of living organisms
New
Subdisciplines
in Biology
Pharmacogenomics– how genes affect a person’s response to drugs
New
Subdisciplines
in Biology
New Subdisciplines in Biology
New
Subdisciplines
in Biology
Lesson 1.2
IMPORTANCE OF STUDYING
BIOLOGY
Biology can help solve
societal problems.
Why study Biology?
Why study Biology?
• Studying biology helps you
understand the functions
and reactions of your
body.
BIOLOGY as a SCIENCE
Biology is an objective, logical, and
repeatable attempt to understand
the principles and forces operating
in the natural world.
How do biologists
study life?
Science is a body of systematized information about living things
derived from observations and experiments.
Knowledge in biology and its immense data is dependent on the study of structures and
processes that need to be validated either directly or indirectly with the help of tools, such as
microscopes, that extend the physical capacity of your senses.
Biologists blend two main approaches in
scientific investigations
• Relies mainly on
DISCOVERY-
BASED verifiable
SCIENCE observations
and
measurements
HYPOTHESIS-
• Involves the
BASED use of
SCIENCE scientific
method
OBSERVATION:
identifying and clearly defining the
problem
INDUCTIVE
ordinary guess; based on existing knowledge
BOTTOM-UP TOP-DOWN
approach approach
Specific to General General to Specific
DEDUCTIVE
hypothesis that can later hypothesis
be tested before
producing a general
conclusion.
INDUCTIVE LEAP – common pitfall where
one tends to jump into general observations
from only few specific things.
EXPERIMENT:
conducting controlled attempts to test
one or more hypothesis and includes
recording and analyzing results
• Experimental design
• Involves the use of various references
and extensive related literature
CONCLUSION:
formulating generalization about the
results that may accept, reject or
modify the hypothesis
The Theory of
Spontaneous
Idea: Generation /
Proposed by Abiogenesis Concept:
Aristotle in the 4th small organisms are
century, a belief spontaneously
that last until 17th generated from
century. nonliving matter
As time passes by, scientists
questioned this idea with an opposing
concept.
BIOGENESIS
A belief that life originates from
preexisting life.
Experiments
to prove
BIOGENESI
S
Studies to prove BIOGENESIS
FRANCESCO REDI
(1668)
• Italian physician who experimented on
fresh meat in jars
• Disprove the theory of spontaneous
generation, concluded that life arose
from living matter, such as maggots
from eggs
• In the first jar, with the meat sealed inside by a stopper, maggots did not
appear on the meat;
• in the second jar, covered with mesh, maggots also did not appear on the
meat;
• but in the third jar, without a cover, maggots did appear on the meat and
developed into flies.
Studies on Spontaneous Generation
JOHN NEEDHAM
(1748)
Using his microscope, an English
experimenter and priest, John
Needham, noticed that broths
made from meat were teeming
with microorganisms, so he put it
to his own test.
Needham heated the broth, let it sit covered for several days, then observed
microorganisms in the fluid.
In Needham’s mind, this finding suggested that the lifeless broth had given rise to life.
But another scientist, an Italian named Lazzaro Spallanzani, thought that Needham must
have done something wrong. Perhaps, he hadn’t heated the broth to a high enough
temperature or for a long enough time.
Studies to prove BIOGENESIS
LAZZARO
SPALLANZANI (1767)
• He boiled broth in two bottles, left one
bottle open and one closed, and found
that new microorganisms appeared only
in the open bottle.
Divine Spontaneous
Panspermia
Creation Origin
DIVINE CREATION
(Bioinformatics)
(Medicolegal and
Criminal Laboratories)
Twenty-first Century Biology Careers
Public servants and
consultants
(Government agencies)
(insurance companies)
(Mass Media)
(Agriculture and
Fisheries)
(field of research)