We’re at the final frontier.
Life sciences, a field often associated with high school biology teachers or underpaid technicians, is the next big thing. While most are obsessed with recent AI developments (which, to be frank, are very impressive), the life sciences fields (bioengineering, genetics, and translational medicine mainly) are truly at the forefront.
AI is impressive, cool, and helps you churn out assignments faster, but it isn’t the final frontier. The final frontier involves us humans. We’re made up of cells, proteins, and glued together through biochemistry. Understanding what makes us, us, is the final frontier.
Without life sciences, there is no hope of humans becoming multi-planetary. Without life sciences, there is no hope of saving your relatives from impending death. Without life sciences, we cannot live forever.
This blog is dedicated to analyzing recent developments in the life sciences, and exploring how they can further humanity’s mission of being the ultimate life form.
Why the name? Simple, I got rejected from Stanford (BioE).