Eventually I realised there must be a way by playing with the molecules; trying to turn the molecules on and off allows you to see adjacent things you couldn't see before.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
According to the belief, molecules closer together than 200 nanometers could not be told apart with focused light. This is because, in a packed molecular crowd, the molecules shout out their fluorescence simultaneously, causing their signal, their voices, to be confused.
I can't see as well as I used to. Which is actually convenient because everything I see is in extremely soft focus! I think that's God's little gift to me.
We can track and see the production of single molecules, trace them and see how they assemble into structures.
It must be born in mind that one does not see directly - as is the case in the exploration of the surface of the brain - where the electrodes are attacking.
Sometimes you have to shove all the surface stuff to the side in order to see what's underneath.
Calling on each molecule one by one? No way. I just told all of them to be quiet - except for a selected few.
The laws of physics should allow us to arrange things molecule by molecule and even atom by atom, and at some point it was inevitable that we would develop a technology that would let us do this.
I started my scientific work by putting forward a hypothesis on the arrangement of atoms in nitrogen-containing molecules.
In classical oil painting, there seemed to be a radical turn to seeing things as the camera sees them, with that technological modification. I began to have a tremendous problem with all of this.
You look at the floor and see the floor. I look at the floor and see molecules.