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John Wilkins is an eternal student, who thinks philosophy of biology is at least as interesting as politics or sport and twice as important. He has a PhD from the University of Melbourne and worked at the University of Queensland, in Australia, before taking up a research fellowship at the University of Sydney. After a varied career, involving factories, gardening, civil service, publishing, graphics, public relations but not, unfortunately for the CV, driving a truck, John finally completed his thesis on species concepts in 2004, which he has worked into two books.

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« Basic Concepts: Progress, Primitive and Advanced | Main

Basic Concepts in Science: A list

Category: AdministrativeBasic ConceptsEvolutionGeneral ScienceLogic and philosophyPhilosophy of Science
Posted on: February 28, 2007 11:13 PM, by John S. Wilkins

This is a list of the Basic Concepts posts being put up by Science Bloggers and others. It will be updated and put to the top when new entries are published. If you are not a Scienceblogger, email me (see below) and let me know of your post, or someone else's.

New Today: I've added a couple of old posts of mine, one on "Primitive" and one on "Macroevolution", which is a FAQ at the Talk.Origins Archive.

Physics

"Energy" by Chad Orzel at Uncertain Principles
"Fields" by Chad Orzel at Uncertain Principles
"Force" by Chad Orzel at Uncertain Principles

A shopping list of sought Basics for physics is given here by physics is fundamental at Cocktail Party Physics.


Chemistry

"pH" by Cat at Lab Cat
"Strong and Weak Acids" by Cat at Lab Cat
"Acids and Bases" by Cat at Lab Cat
"What is Food Science?" by Cat at Lab Cat
"Food Chemistry" by Cat at Lab Cat
"Elements" by Janet Stemwedel at Adventures in Ethics and Science

Biology

Genes and Genomes
"Gene" by PZ Myers at Pharyngula
"What is a Gene?" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"Gene" by Greg Laden
"New definitions of a Gene" by Allen McNeill at The Evolution List
"The Richard Dawkins Definition of a Gene Is Seriously Flawed" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"How Proteins Fold" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"Heat Shock and Molecular Chaperones" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"The Genetic Code" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"ABO Blood types" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"Genetics of ABO Blood types" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"Genetics of Eye Color" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"Collagen" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"How do you sequence a Genome? Parts I, II, III, IV, V, and VI" by Ask Dr Science at Discovering Biology in a Digital World
"What are Hypothetical and Putative Proteins?" by Ask Dr Science at Discovering Biology in a Digital World
"Linkage Disequilibrium" by Razib at Gene Expression
"Mutations" by evolgen at Coalescence

Evolution and Phylogenetics
"Evolution" by Larry Moran at Sandwalk
"The Many Faces of 'Evolution'" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts
"The Three Necessary and Sufficient Conditions of Natural Selection" by Greg Laden
"Modes of Natural Selection" by Greg Laden
"Artificial and Natural Selection" by Mike the Mad Biologist
"Sexual Selection" by Razib at Gene Expression
"Human Evolution 1001" by Greg Laden
"Fitness" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts
"Measuring Fitness" by Mike Dunford at The Questionable Authority
"Clade" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts
"Species" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts
"Primitive" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts
"Macroevolution" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts
"Why Spiders aren't Insects, parts I, II, III, IV, and V" by Jeremy Bruno at The Voltage Gate

Ecology and Environment
"What is Ecology?" by Jeremy Bruno at The Voltage Gate
"Biomes I" by Jeremy Bruno at The Voltage Gate
"Biomes: Tropical Rain Forest" by Jeremy Bruno at The Voltage Gate
"Biomes III: Tropical Dry Forest" by Jeremy Bruno at The Voltage Gate

Other or multiple topics
"Artifacts and Vectors" by Ask Dr Science at Discovering Biology in a Digital World
"8th Grade Math (Hardy Weinberg, Genetic Variance, Molecules and Phylogenies, Kin)" by Razib at Gene Expression
"Biological Clock" by Bora Zivkovic at A Blog Around the Clock
"Anisogamy" by Matt, at Behavioral Ecology Blog
"Cell migration" by Dan, at Migrations
"Hearing" by Shelley at Retrospectacle
"How do we smell?" by Sunil at balancing life.
"Prions" by Shelley at Retrospectacle
"Gastrulation in Vertebrates" by PZ Myers at Pharyngula
"Gastrulation in invertebrates" by PZ Myers at Pharyngula

Teaching resources for biology
Bora Zivkovic at A Blog Around the Clock has a series of lectures as posts that teachers may find useful, his BIO101 speed-course lecture (and lab) notes. Almost none of them cover a very narrow term or concept (some come close):

Historical and social sciences

"Pottery in Archeology" by CFeagans at Hot Cup of Joe
"Cause, Manner and Mechanism of Death" [Forensic science] by William the Coroner at Dr Zeus's Forensic Files


Mathematics, Philosophy, Logic and Computer Science

Statistics
"Normal Distribution" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Mean, Median and Mode" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Standard Deviation" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Margin of Error" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Correlation (and Causation, and Random Variables) by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math

"Statistics Primer, Part 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5" by Echidne of the Snakes
[Unfortunately, each post does not open in a separate window, but the whole thing is accessible from here]

General Mathematics

"Multidimensional Numbers" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Vectors" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Algebra", by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Calculus" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Limits" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Recursion" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Turing Machine" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"The Halting Problem" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Real Numbers" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Algorithm" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Infinity and Infinite Sums" by Jason Rosenhouse at EvolutionBlog
"Numbers" by Jason Rosenhouse at EvolutionBlog
"Metric System" by Dr Joan Bushwell at Chimpanzee Refuge
"Modular Arithmetic" by Alon Levy at Abstract Nonsense

Logic and Computability
"Logic" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Syntax and Semantics" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Sets" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math
"Arguments" by Janet Stemwedel at Adventures in Ethics and Science
"Optimization" by Mark Chu-Carroll at Good Math, Bad Math

Philosophy, Philosophy of Science
"The Feminist Theory of Science" by Zuska, at Thus Spake Zuska
"Falsifiable Claims" by Janet Stemwedel at Adventures in Ethics and Science
"Epistemology" by Benjamin Cohen at The Worlds Fair
"Theory" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts
"Introductory texts for philosophy of biology" by John Wilkins at Evolving Thoughts

Medicine and Psychiatry

"Introduction to Microbiology and Infectious Disease" by Tara C. Smith at Aetiology
"Normal flora", "Normal Flora 2" by Tara C. Smith at Aetiology
"Determining the Cause of Disease (Koch's Postulates)" by Sandra Porter at Discovering Biology in a Digital World
"Seasonal Affective Disorder" by Bora Zivkovic at A Blog Around the Clock
"Selection of Antidepressants, Part I, "Part 2" "Part 3" by Corpus Callosum

In each case, read the comments too.

I've decided to list these by field and topic and author, respectively (this allows multiple authors to cover one topic, as in Gene).

We don't want this to be a competitor to Wikipedia, but a chatty and useful resource for folk to get into whatever they need to at the start of learning a topic. If you know of older posts of this kind, do let me know by email. My address is john-dot-s-dot-wilkins-at-gmail-dot-com (make the obvious amendments by removing dashes and dots and replacing them with "." or "@").

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Comments

#1

Larry Moran (Sandwalk)- Evolution?

Posted by: paul | January 18, 2007 10:41 PM

#2

Actually that was harder to find than I thought. Here is the link:

http://sandwalk.blogspot.com/2007/01/what-is-evolution.html

Posted by: paul | January 18, 2007 10:58 PM

#3

My mistake. Thanks

Posted by: John Wilkins | January 18, 2007 11:11 PM

#4

Larry also had one on the Central Dogma of Molecular Biology

Posted by: coturnix | January 19, 2007 12:53 AM

#5

Thanks for doing this, John. It really makes the whole exercise that much more effective.

Posted by: AndyS | January 21, 2007 12:48 PM

#6

Add Sandra Porter's stuff from yesterday (Gene) and today (DNA Cloning).

Posted by: coturnix | January 22, 2007 09:27 AM

#7

Sorry - sequencing the genome....

Posted by: coturnix | January 22, 2007 09:29 AM

#8

Nitpick:
The "Fields" entry belongs under Chad, not Mark.

Posted by: KeithB | January 23, 2007 06:45 PM

#9

That's no nit! Thanks!

Posted by: John Wilkins | January 23, 2007 07:15 PM

#10

Silly me! I read that as meaning 'The List: A Basic Concept in Science' with references to P*t*r Ny*k*s.

Posted by: Ian H Spedding FCD | January 25, 2007 08:44 AM

#11

If you do call him from the vasty deep, he's all yours.

Posted by: John Wilkins | January 25, 2007 08:58 AM

#12

A basic concept: Anisogamy

Posted by: Matt | January 26, 2007 04:49 PM

#14

I can't lay hands on a post at this moment for this, but Koch's postulates. If no one has one to hand, I can write something this afternoon.

Posted by: Frederick Ross | January 28, 2007 09:40 AM

#15

Hi John,

I found this post through Bora's post on the biological clock.

These 2 posts may be good for the collection, if you want to include links more targeted to lay readers than to scientists.

What is "It" in "Use It or Lose It"?

Brain Fitness Glossary

regards

Posted by: Alvaro | January 28, 2007 03:44 PM

#16

"Current Biological Diversity" post from the series of BIO101 lecture notes has been since re-posted from the old blog to the new and the better URL is: http://scienceblogs.com/clock/2007/01/current_biological_diversity.php

Posted by: coturnix | January 29, 2007 12:40 AM

#17

I don't know if you're accepting podcast episodes for this series, but I've got an episode on the scientific method (basic enough?) here:

http://geekcounterpoint.net/files/GC004.html

Lorne

Posted by: Lorne Ipsum | January 29, 2007 01:41 PM

#18

Oh, heck -- and while I'm at it, here are some others:

The fossil record -- http://geekcounterpoint.net/files/GC014.html

Stem cells -- http://geekcounterpoint.net/files/GC018.html

Special relativity -- http://geekcounterpoint.net/files/GC022.html

General relativity -- http://geekcounterpoint.net/files/GC027.html

Quantum mechanics -- http://geekcounterpoint.net/files/GC033.html

Climate Change 101 -- http://geekcounterpoint.net/files/GC045.html

Lorne

Posted by: Lorne Ipsum | January 29, 2007 01:49 PM

#19

I have noticed that Echidne's Statistics primer can be reached more easily from her website:

http://www.echidne-of-the-snakes.com/

Click on Statistics primer at the left, and you get the whole thing.

Posted by: paul | January 30, 2007 10:22 AM

#20

I added the link, but that's a damned messy bit of formatting.

Posted by: John Wilkins | January 30, 2007 10:33 PM

#21
I can't lay hands on a post at this moment for this, but Koch's postulates. If no one has one to hand, I can write something this afternoon.

Frederick, did you do this? If not, I'd love to write one up on this...

Posted by: Tara C. Smith | February 2, 2007 12:00 AM

#23

Yes it is, thanks.

Posted by: John Wilkins | February 2, 2007 07:33 AM

#24

A wiki may be the way to go. That will let people add their own posts and save you some work.

I converted your HTML to wiki (using this tool), then uploaded it to two different wikispaces

http://basicconcepts.wikispaces.com/
http://basicconcepts.pbwiki.com/

I'm not sure if they're exactly what you're looking for - they both lack some styling options and have text ads. In any case, I figured I'd upload it to both and let you guys decide. If anyone has a better recommendation for wiki hosting, it's easy to copy and paste the content over someplace new.

Posted by: Chris Miller | February 2, 2007 02:43 PM

#25

And now appearing: What is a vector? in three different languages, too! (physics, epidemiology, & molecular biology)

http://scienceblogs.com/digitalbio/2007/02/biology_as_a_second_language_w.php

Posted by: Sandra Porter | February 2, 2007 04:31 PM

#26

Great post.

Posted by: Steven | February 3, 2007 10:27 PM

#27

I have a primer about Modular arithmetic.

Posted by: Alon Levy | February 3, 2007 11:14 PM

#28

John,

Since your list of links keeps growing and growing (and growing... and growing...), maybe it deserves a site of its own. I kind of cringe suggesting this (since deleting link spam could turn into a full time job for somebody), but maybe a wiki-style site for science tutorials wouldn't be such a bad thing all-in-all... Rather than have to host tutorials all over the place, people could just volunteer to maintain their own sections of the wiki.

Sam

Posted by: Sam Wise | February 5, 2007 10:20 PM

#29

Sam, I am aware of a move at our Masters and Overlords to set this up as a separate blog. When the legal issues (copyright permissions) and formatting have been sorted, I'll announce it here. I'll continue to be involved.

Posted by: John Wilkins | February 7, 2007 11:54 PM

#30

I've been meaning to stop by and thank you and the rest of the SciBlings for putting this together. I think it's going to be an invaluable resource -- I've already wiled away several hours perusing some of the posts -- and once there's a permanent home, I'll be placing a permanent link on my own blog.

Kudos to all, but especially John for overseeing the nuts and bolts...

Posted by: Jennifer Ouellette | February 12, 2007 06:06 PM

#31

Hmm, if you fancy a fun read, go through Bad Science and pick something out. For example, on The Prosecutor's Fallacy.

Hmmm, a bit of cross-fertilisation might be required. Back soon.

Bob

Posted by: Bob O'H | February 13, 2007 01:23 AM

#32

I'd be interested in learning how scientists are able to trace a particular protein back to its gene. In other words, once a biochemist notices that something cool is going on in a cell, how does she discover which protein is doing this interesting task. And once she's isolated the protein, how does she find it in the genome? I assume that there is a clear and simple was to explain this, but I'm not sure who's blog to direct it to.

Posted by: Matt | February 19, 2007 11:57 PM

#33

Matt, I passed your question on to some folks. If anything comes of it, I'll announce it here.

Posted by: John Wilkins | February 20, 2007 12:03 AM

#34

Matt, I have been referred to this post at Science Creative Quarterly, as a partial answer to your question.

Posted by: John Wilkins | February 20, 2007 08:44 PM

#35

'The fraud of homeopathy' by Shalini at Scientia Natura:

http://scientianatura.blogspot.com/2006/10/fraud-of-homeopathy.html

Posted by: joshua chong | February 21, 2007 04:41 AM

#36

A nice piece, but not an introduction of a basic science concept, I'm afraid. I'm being editorial and making an executive decision.

Posted by: John Wilkins | February 21, 2007 05:01 AM

#37

Thanks for the referral John, it certainly addresses part of my question. I guess my question is more broad...not just how is an unidentified protein characterized, but how is a specific action in the cell traced back to it's protein? You've already been very helpful, hopefully some other ScienceBlogger will step up to the plate ;-)

Posted by: Matt | February 21, 2007 11:31 PM

#38

Here's a more in-depth consideration of the definition of a gene:

http://evolutionlist.blogspot.com/2006/10/new-definitions-of-gene.html

Posted by: Allen MacNeill | February 27, 2007 08:48 AM

#39

Could I suggest making a little adjustment to your taxonomy? I think you're accumulating enough posts under the heading "Mathematics, Philosophy, Logic and Computer Science" to justify splitting math, philosophy and comp sci into separate headings (and logic posts could go into any of those three depending on the particular slant of the post).

Some of Mark's posts that are currently listed under General Math are probably better categorized as comp sci: Recursion, Turing Machine, The Halting Problem, and Algorithm, while his Sets post is more like General Math.

Not that I would want try to micromanage your great work here. I can feel my hair getting pointy already.

Posted by: Kurt | February 28, 2007 09:34 AM

#40

Yes, it is getting unmanageable, isn't it? I don't quite know how to set it all out. And it's only going to get worse. I think I may split the post into one for each science, and just link to them from the Basic Concepts main post.

Go all pointy haired. I can take it. I have worked for worse managers in my time...

Posted by: John Wilkins | February 28, 2007 09:37 AM

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