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RE: How a Boy From an Indian Village Broke the Code of Life and Won the Nobel Prize
It is quite fascinating that many scientific terms are borrowed directly from religious sources, such as the Central Dogma of genetics and Laws of Newton. Do the scientists consciously label their findings in terms of religion or faith because such labels provide symbols of legitimacy? Or maybe the scientists perceive themselves as doing God's work? Or are they truly cursed with monumental ego?
It's an interesting question! I'd say the reasons are probably all of those!
Some have monumental egos, no doubt about that.
Some simply honestly believe these are laws in the sense that hey held and will hold forever (and since Newton did believe in God, he probably thought he was simply revealing the laws set down by his Creator).
And for some I think the words might simply sound nice! You have to call it something. In the case of the Central Dogma, since it was Crick who named it, I think it was mainly a case of making it memorable and being playful with words; he wasn't the type to call something by a dry name like others would, and I'm with him on that, we need to make science more interesting even when it comes to the names we give to things.