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Monod, Jacques Lucien
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Monod, Jacques Lucien (1910–1976)

French biochemist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1965 with his co-workers André Lwoff and François Jacob for research into the genetic control of enzyme and virus synthesis.

Monod was born and educated in Paris. From 1945 he worked at the Pasteur Institute, where he collaborated with Lwoff and Jacob. In 1953, Monod became director of the Department of Cellular Biochemistry at the Pasteur Institute and also a professor at the University of Paris. In 1971, he was appointed director of the entire Pasteur Institute.

Working on the way in which genes control intracellular metabolism in micro-organisms, Monod and his colleagues postulated the existence of a class of genes (which they called operons) that regulate the activities of the genes that actually control the synthesis of enzymes within the cell. They further hypothesized that the operons suppress the activities of the enzyme-synthesizing genes by affecting the synthesis of messenger RNA.

In his book Chance and Necessity (1971), Monod summoned contemporary biochemical discoveries to support the idea that all forms of life result from random mutation (chance) and Darwinian selection (necessity).



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As for evolutionism, I don't think it is admissible because it is an ideology that denies purpose and holds that everything is due to chance and to necessity, as Jacques Monod affirms in his book Chance and Necessity, proposing atheist materialism.
Speaking about common characteristics of living things, the Nobel prize-winning biochemist Jacques Monod once said, "What is true for [the bacterium Escherichia] coli is true for the elephant.
Nevertheless, the science and argumentation Wilson presents on the sociobiology of religion are formidable, going well beyond the groping ideas that fellow biologist Jacques Monod had pioneered.
 
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