Beadle believed that genetics were inseparable from chemistry—more precisely, biochemistry. They were, he said, 'two doors leading to the same room'


In Warren Weaver, Science and Imagination (1967), xii. Quoted in Thomas Hager, Force of Nature: The Life of Linus Pauling (1995)


Beadle believed that genetics were inseparable from chemistry—more precisely, biochemistry. They were, he said, 'two doors leading to the same room'

Beadle believed that genetics were inseparable from chemistry—more precisely, biochemistry. They were, he said, 'two doors leading to the same room'

Beadle believed that genetics were inseparable from chemistry—more precisely, biochemistry. They were, he said, 'two doors leading to the same room'

Beadle believed that genetics were inseparable from chemistry—more precisely, biochemistry. They were, he said, 'two doors leading to the same room'