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Biology = Applied Applied Applied Maths?

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potterfan3 | 21:59 Sat 01st Dec 2007 | Science
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My Chemistry teacher frequently calls biology applied chemistry, and physics applied maths, and he always says chemistry is the most important science. Recently a Physics teacher (not mine he teaches the other A level class) covered our lesson and told us the chemistry was just applied physics. If we accept both as true, does that make biology applied applied applied maths?
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I was always told if it moves its Biology, if it smells its Chemistry and if it doesn't work its Physics!
They're all kind of right.

It's just a joke between the disciplines though; each of them think they're superior to the others.

(Disclaimer: I'm a physicist, so clearly physics is the answer to everything...)

Physics is what I think to be the fundamental science -- how everything works and interacts. Physics of the atom, specifically including the outer electron shell, and even more so longer molecules (organic), is such a large topic that it branched out into its own subject -- chemistry.

Biology, at its heart, is explained by chemistry (just as chemistry is fundamentally explained by topics of physics -- quantum theory, etc.). But it's more than just that, otherwise they'd still be chemists. They do things in ways chemists don't, for particular chemistries. Hence the separate discipline.

Maths is regarded as a science too. I myself see it more as a language to describe things more precisely than everyday language can. As a language, it's required for physics, chemistry, biology, everything. Anywhere where languages like English aren't good enough. There are those that work to extend the language -- mathematicians. They also look for patterns in the language that may reveal things about it we don't presently know. It follows scientific principle.
If you think of a pyramid where each step is dependent on the one below, then Mathematics will be the basis of all science, then one up is physics, then chemistry, then biology, then perhaps medicine, neurology (say) then what? psychiatry, then psychology.

Thats the way I see it anyway.
Don't forget all these "ologies" describe what may happen, all things being equal in an ideal environment without external interfference and subject to experimatal error - which is why "real" science is called Engineering!

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