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reviewed Biocode by Dawn Field

Dawn Field, Neil Davies: Biocode

A Recovering Software Engineer's Review

0.1 Introduction to Biocode

Biocode, by Field and Davies, might better be structured in two parts. Its first four chapters present the reader with what may be termed a minimal bootstrapping into the world of genetics in a broad sense. The second four chapters detail the scaling opportunities for genetic technology, showcasing how such technologies have insights to offer from the microbial world all the way to the entire planet.

The first part provides the reader with a layman’s introduction to genetic technology in its first chapter, “DNA,” a non-critical overview of real and potential commercial uses in its second chapter, “Personal Genomics,” a poor attempt to prod the ethics of the field in its third chapter, “Homo Evolutis,” and an incomplete treatment of bioinformatics in its fourth chapter, “Zoo in My Sequencer.” As evidenced by this author’s choice of adjectives, I find this part of the book deficient. The …

An irony I pointed out after the first blow-up over abuse & apologia from but not on here - one of his early insights that I'd actually consider novel and important (with some caveats about how it needed updating with new realities) was his idea that closed source software can make your hardware that you own do things you don't want it to do. An analogy to bodily autonomy. And it's an insight he failed to apply outside this narrow scope, being a sex pest and abuse apologist.