Can humans coexist with viruses?

Updated on healthy 2024-07-23
16 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    From the standpoint of natural scientists, the assertion that "human beings will coexist with viruses" is undoubtedly correct and reasonable. Because "rationality" at the natural level is "regularity", viruses, as microorganisms with strong vitality in nature, coexist with other organisms on the earth, which is lawful and therefore reasonable. It is impossible for humanity to try to eradicate the virus that is threatening it once and for all, and therefore such claims are unreasonable.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Yes! There are thousands of viruses in the world, and human beings have developed drugs again and again to control the virus, so that people and viruses coexist, and people can resist and control the virus.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    It will not coexist with humans in the same body for a long time, it will exist in the environment of the earth's survival, and the virus is preventable and curable in the body. It will be researched to kill the virus, so it will not coexist with humans for a long time. Generally, patients who are transmitted will be killed quickly, and the virus will be killed, so it will not coexist with humans for a long time.

    Usually taking precautions when going out can also prevent the virus.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Viruses do not survive unilaterally, they can only survive if they host on their hosts.

    The virus also has its own philosophy of survival, which is to coexist peacefully with the host and never destroy this ecological balance without authorization. For example, viruses generally inhabit bats and monkeys, as well as civet cats, and these animals themselves are alive and well. The virus did not actively attack them and kill their owners.

    It's humans who kill them. It is human beings who have disrupted this delicate ecological balance without authorization. The purpose is simply to satisfy one's unbridled appetite, that is, to eat wild game.

    It is conceivable that having killed the host of the virus, that is, the owner of the virus, will naturally be retaliated by the virus. This is no different from the powerful human desire for revenge.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Not only that, but new individuals are being created every moment.

    Most viruses are transmitted through genetic material RNA, and human genetic material DNA, DNA is a double-stranded structure, which will supervise each other during the replication process, and if errors are found in the replication process, they will also be found and repaired in time, while single-stranded RNA does not have such a mechanism, so in self-replication, the error rate is high, which also leads to a high mutation rate of genes, resulting in the creation of new and different individuals. In addition, mutant individuals can easily exchange gene fragments with normal individuals, and it is also very easy to create new individuals.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Viruses are everywhere in our daily life, so to speak, we can't live without viruses, it is different from human DNA, viruses rely on RNA to survive, a single RNA does not have a supervisory function and self-repair, so it is easier to self-replicate, leading to mutation. About 40 to 60 percent of the genes in our human body are related to viruses, so without viruses, there would be no human society.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Scientific research can coexist.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    I think some viruses can coexist.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Viruses have always been parasitic species, so it is impossible to coexist with women.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Zhong Nanshan. The academician once said that if the impact of the new crown on human health slowly decreases, then the long-term coexistence of the new crown and human beings will become possible. We may need to get vaccinated regularly, just as we do for the flu.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The relationship between viruses and humans is one of mutual balance.

    Viruses can be blocked by humans, but viruses cannot be destroyed! Although, we humans are fighting to the death against the virus on all battlefields. Because, in this nature, there are many viruses and bacteria that we humans do not know.

    Again, if these strange guests come suddenly, we can't afford it. Human beings have a society in which human beings live, and viruses also have an environment in which they exist, and the two sides have a mutually balanced relationship, which is also the basic law of the ecological balance of the whole nature.

    In summary, humans and viruses are species that have existed on the earth for a long time and will continue to exist in the future. When dealing with the virus, we scientists need to exert greater wisdom on how to understand it and how to use it. Before that, what each of us ordinary people can do is prevention, that is, not to easily upset the balance between humans and the virus, and to be specific to the immediate situation, is not to eat wild animals.

    Characteristics of the virus:

    Viruses are a class of non-cellular microorganisms that are small, simple in structure, contain only one type of nucleic acid, and are strictly intracellular parasitic. Viruses cannot live independently and must parasitize inside the cells of other organisms, viruses do not have cell walls.

    It is made up of the outer shell of a protein and the genetic material inside.

    Viruses mainly include animal viruses, plant viruses, and bacterial viruses.

    Animal viruses have a pathogenic effect on humans, including influenza virus, HIV virus, varicella zoster virus.

    Most viruses are not susceptible to antibiotics.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Viruses endanger human health, and human beings prevent and use viruses. Scientists are able to allow certain viruses to carry certain genes of plants, animals or microorganisms into normal cells to achieve the purpose of transgenic or genetic**.

    The virus itself is not harmful, only parasitic in human and animal and plant cells can cause harm to the human body, animals and plants, cause human diseases, harm cash crops, poultry and livestock, etc.

    Not all viruses are harmful, and people can use certain properties of viruses for the benefit of humanity. For example, people can make vaccines from viruses to prevent diseases caused by these viruses according to the characteristics of bacteriophages that specifically parasitize in bacterial cells,** some bacterial diseases.

    Ways to defend against viruses:

    1. Pay attention to cleanliness and hygiene.

    Sanitation is crucial to preventing viral infections, not only affecting one's own image and temperament, but also continuing to affect one's physical and mental health. In daily life, it is important to ensure that you pay attention to hygiene and change your clothes frequently.

    2. Enhance physical fitness.

    The stronger our physique, the better our ability to defend against virus attacks. Therefore, we should improve our physical exercise to improve our immunity and reduce the risk of viral infection.

    3. Maintain effective diet matching.

    In order to prevent viral infection, it is also necessary to ensure that the diet is matched with nutrition, and it is recommended that everyone take more fresh fruits and vegetables in their daily life and eat more grains; You don't have to be picky.

  13. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Harmful side: Sickens people and other living things and endangers their health. For example: smallpox, viral hepatitis, poliomyelitis, influenza in humans, foot-and-mouth disease and rabies in animals, as well as tobacco mosaic disease and potato degeneration in plants.

    On the plus side:

    1. Bacteriophages can be used as specific drugs for the prevention and treatment of certain diseases, such as applying Bacillus aeruginosa phage dilution to the affected area in burn patients.

    2. In cell engineering, some viruses can be used as melting aids for cell fusion, such as Sendai virus.

    3. In genetic engineering, viruses can be used as carriers of target genes to be spliced on the chromosomes of target cells.

    4. Viruses added to a specific bacterial medium can be impurified.

    5. Viruses can be used as carriers for precision-guided drugs.

    6. Viruses can be used as special insecticides.

    7. Viruses also play a key role in the material cycle and energy exchange in the biosphere Viral vaccines are good for human beings to protect against viruses - promoting the evolution of human beings, and many of human genes are derived from viruses.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Viruses and humans have a symbiotic relationship, and 8% of the genes in the human body belong to viral genes.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    The virus and human beings will coexist for a long time, the advantage is that the existence of the virus can enhance the body's resistance, and the disadvantage is that it will cause harm to the human body.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The coexistence between humans and multiple viruses is a state of relative equilibrium. Viruses are very evolutionary, able to mutate beyond the resistance of humans, and can multiply in large numbers in a short period of time, so it is difficult to completely eradicate them. But the human immune system can also be upgraded to develop new defense mechanisms against the virus.

    This antagonistic relationship will continue until the side of the human or virus has taken the upper hand and a complete and radical change takes place.

    In addition, there is a complex ecological relationship between humans and multiple viruses. Some viruses are transmitted through natural routes, allowing humans to better adapt to their environment and strengthen their immune systems. In addition, there are some viruses that are not harmful to humans and may even be beneficial to health, such as some viruses that fight infections, reduce inflammation, and prevent cancer.

    Therefore, the interrelationship between humans and multiple viruses is complex and diverse.

    In general, the reason for the long-term coexistence of viruses and humans depends on a variety of factors such as complex ecology, evolution, and human lifestyle.

Related questions
9 answers2024-07-23

Life is like this, we can't avoid unhappiness and pain, so how can we make ourselves happy after experiencing these pains? I think true happiness comes from the comprehension of pain, because life without pain is not able to feel happy, we can only face it correctly, analyze it rationally, affirm and affirm to deny what should be denied, only in this way can we learn to give up, to know how to cherish, to remember what should be remembered, to forget what should be forgotten, in order to analyze the pain in life, let yourself be painful and happy to live, so that everything has become a wealth of your life, an experience, a memory, A realization, not just pain. In this way, we can calmly look at the past, live openly, live happily, and live without regrets, so that life can be truly happy. >>>More

10 answers2024-07-23

No. Pneumococcus pneumococcus is a type of bacteria that are classified into spherical, rod-shaped, spiral-shaped. Some spherical forms are a single ball and one bacterium, and some are dicoccus, that is, two spherical bacteria are connected together. >>>More

12 answers2024-07-23

Metabolism is the criterion for judging whether something is a living thing (a living organism), so this is used to judge whether a virus is a living thing. Although we continue to debate whether viruses are alive or not, from the perspective of most people, viruses are living things, they have life, but viruses have their own particularities. >>>More

3 answers2024-07-23

It's not an ARP virus, it's unlikely that ARP is in diskless Internet cafes, and it's not the phenomenon you're talking about. Slow startup could be something else.

6 answers2024-07-23

Analysis: Hello, your diagnosis is clear, it belongs to the virus**risk, and it needs to be positive**. >>>More