Bonnie Lynn Bassler, Ph.D (born 1962) is an American molecular biologist. She has been a professor at Princeton University since 1994. In 2002, she was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship.
My bacteria glow in the dark - no human being doesn't like that.
You think of yourselves as human beings, but I think of you as 99 percent bacterial.
I think being open-minded about what Nature is trying to tell you is the key to being creative and successful.
Bacteria mineralized the rocks; they deposited the iron. They made the geology we see.
The goal of scientists is you hope that the thing you're working on is bigger than the thing you're pipetting into that tube at the moment.
When antibiotics became industrially produced following World War II, our quality of life and our longevity improved enormously. No one thought bacteria were going to become resistant.
[Bacteria] have an incredibly complicated chemical lexicon that. . . allows bacteria to be multicellular. In the spirit of TED they're doing things together because it makes a difference.
C. Vivian Stringer
Robert Cheeke
Kenneth E. Hagin
Jeffrey Steingarten
Gene Shalit
Harry West
Jam Master Jay
Dave Mason
Betty Smith
Bob Brookmeyer
Ben Klassen
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