The molecules in your cells move in a way that is beyond surprising.
When something is as small and light as a molecule, it has very little inertia. In other words, it takes very little energy to move a molecule a great distance.
This allows molecules to move amazingly fast. If you were to track the movement of one molecule in one of your cells, you would find that it moves at about 16 feet per second (not in a straight line of course).
This amazing speed causes many particle interactions, which allow the components of complex molecules to come together, being built by sheer chance.
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IDEAS CURATED BY
CURATOR'S NOTE
This book has far too much information for me to summarize everything, so these are simply my favorite concepts from "Immune" by Philipp Dettmer.
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Different Perspectives Curated by Others from Immune
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