Chapter
1. Biology and Computer Science
One of the most exciting things about being involved in computer
programming and
biology is
that both fields are rich in new techniques and results.
Of course, biology is an old science, but many of the most
interesting directions in biological research are based on recent
techniques and ideas. The modern science of genetics, which has
earned a prominent place in modern biology, is just about 100 years
old, dating from the widespread acknowledgement of Mendel's
work. The elucidation of the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
and the first protein structure are about 50 years old, and the
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique of cloning DNA is almost 20
years old. The last decade saw the launching and completion of the
Human Genome Project that revealed the totality of human genes and
much more. Today, we're in a golden age of biological
research—a point in human history of great medical, scientific,
and philosophical importance.
Computer science is relatively new. Algorithms have been around since
ancient times (Euclid), and the interest in computing machinery is
also antique (Pascal's mechanical calculator, for instance, or
Babbage's steam-driven inventions of the 19th century). But
programming was really born about 50 years ago, at the same time as
construction of the first large, programmable, digital/electronic
(the ENIAC ) computers. Programming has grown very rapidly to the
present day. The Internet is about 20 years old, as are personal
computers; the Web is about 10 years old. Today, our communications,
transportation, agricultural, financial, government, business,
artistic, and of course, scientific endeavors are closely tied to
computers and their programming.
This rapid and recent growth gives the field of computer programming
a certain excitement and requires that its professional practitioners
keep on their toes. In a way, programming represents procedural
knowledge—the knowledge of how to do things—and one way
to look at the importance of computers in our society and our history
is to see the enormous growth in procedural knowledge that the use of
computers has occasioned. We're also seeing the concepts of
computation and algorithm being adopted widely, for instance, in the
arts and in the law, and of course in the sciences. The computer has
become the ruling metaphor for explaining things in general.
Certainly, it's tempting to think of a cell's molecular
biology in terms of a special kind of computing machinery.
Similarly, the remarkable discoveries in biology have found an echo
in computer science. There are evolutionary programs, neural
networks, simulated annealing, and more. The exchange of ideas and
metaphors between the fields of biology and computer science is, in
itself, a spur to discovery (although the dangers of using an
improper metaphor are also real).