Evolution / Evolutionary biology Books
Sophia Perennis et Universalis The Transformist Illusion
£19.51
Brown Walker Press (FL) Animal Models in Light of Evolution
£47.45
Templeton Foundation Press,U.S. The Runes of Evolution: How the Universe became Self-Aware
Book SynopsisHow did human beings acquire imaginations that can conjure up untrue possibilities? How did the Universe become self-aware? In The Runes of Evolution, Simon Conway Morris revitalizes the study of evolution from the perspective of convergence, providing us with compelling new evidence to support the mounting scientific view that the history of life is far more predictable than once thought. A leading evolutionary biologist at the University of Cambridge, Conway Morris came into international prominence for his work on the Cambrian explosion (especially fossils of the Burgess Shale) and evolutionary convergence, which is the process whereby organisms not closely related (not monophyletic), independently evolve similar traits as a result of having to adapt to similar environments or ecological niches. In The Runes of Evolution, he illustrates how the ubiquity of convergence hints at an underlying framework whereby many outcomes, not least brains and intelligence, are virtually guaranteed on any Earth-like planet. Conway Morris also emphasizes how much of the complexity of advanced biological systems is inherent in microbial forms. By casting a wider net, The Runes of Evolution explores many neglected evolutionary questions. Some are remarkably general. Why, for example, are convergences such as parasitism, carnivory, and nitrogen fixation in plants concentrated in particular taxonomic hot spots? Why do certain groups have a particular propensity to evolve toward particular states? Some questions lead to unexpected evolutionary insights: If bees sleep (as they do), do they dream? Why is that insect copulating with an orchid? Why have sponges evolved a system of fiber optics? What do mantis shrimps and submarines have in common? If dinosaurs had not gone extinct what would have happened next? Will a saber-toothed cat ever re-evolve? Cona Morris observes: “Even amongst the mammals, let alone the entire tree of life, humans represent one minute twig of a vast (and largely fossilized) arborescence. Every living species is a linear descendant of an immense string of now-vanished ancestors, but evolution itself is the very reverse of linear. Rather it is endlessly exploratory, probing the vast spaces of biological hyperspace. Indeed this book is a celebration of how our world is (and was) populated by a riot of forms, a coruscating tapestry of life.” The Runes of Evolution is the most definitive synthesis of evolutionary convergence to be published to date.Trade Review"The runes of evolution spell out a surprising message: Some evolutionary outcomes are virtually inevitable. Or, so goes the argument of Cambridge palaeontologist Simon Conway Morris, resting on two key premises: Evolution repeats itself in unexpected ways: Very different lineages evolve to have similar traits. Conway Morris calls this 'convergence.' Precursors of complex traits, such as a nervous system, are found in much simpler organisms. Conway Morris calls this 'evolutionary inherency.' The premises are supported with a wealth of data—thousands of references across the book’s 27 chapters. The intriguing tale is told by way of a journey over many different areas in which we find convergence and inherency, with touches of humour along the way." —Zachary Ardern, BioLogos“Conway Morris’s exploration of the phenomenon of convergence in biological evolution is rife with implications for Christian theology. It lends credence to a Christian view of God’s providential action in history, and it supports an ecological view of the interdependence of all things in God’s creation. It also fits with a scriptural account of a story-shaped world.” —Ian Curran, Christian Century "This is a very good book. The author is most effective when presenting his evidence as both glaringly obvious and unfairly maligned. Not everyone will like the volume’s familiar tone, but the overall excellence of the writing is hard to deny. Many of the book’s grandest ideas were already covered in his previous publications, but The Runes of Evolution is nevertheless Conway Morris’ most comprehensive statement on convergence to date, and is thus well worth reading." —Abraham H. Gibson, Quarterly Review of Biology (September 2017)This book was presumably written by Morris more for fellow natural scientists than for philosophers and theologians, but in each case so as to prove that his hypothesis of ongoing convergence in evolution is not a series of fortuitous coinci-dences but empirical evidence of established patterns or in-built mechanisms within the evolutionary process. Three hundred pages of text with double columns of print on each page and 150 pages of endnotes make that clear. Names of different species, genera, families, orders, classes, and so on turn up on virtually every page so that the nonprofessional reader ends up hunting for summary statements by Morris at the end of each major subdivision within the 26 chapters. Yet despite its obvious density and degree of detail for the ordinary reader, the implications of this book for philosophical/theological understanding of the God–world relationship and for the classic distinction between the natural and the supernatural within creation are in my judgment very significant. —Joseph A. Bracken, SJ, Xavier University, Cincinnati
£26.99
Cosimo Classics Darwinism: An Exposition of the Theory of Natural Selection with Some of Its Applications
£24.50
Cosimo Classics Island Life
£23.51
Merchant Books The Problem of Increasing Human Energy: With Special Reference to the Harnessing of the Sun's Energy
£9.16
Cosimo Classics The Problem of Increasing Human Energy: With Special Reference to the Harnessing of the Sun's Energy
£10.66
Cosimo Classics Experiments in Plant Hybridisation
£13.62
Bottom of the Hill Publishing The Problem of Increasing Human Energy
£15.60
Lily Hill Publishing The Revival: Path to a New Earth/New Human
Book SynopsisThere is a saying among off-world people that is based on eons of experience and wisdom. It goes: There is no point in trying to change the world. Instead, change the people. They are the ones who make the world. Accompanying this dictum is a matching bit of advice that goes: When a new world is being born, help the people to become new humans. A new world is being born here, and those who want to survive and thrive will have to become new humans. We cannot do this without deeply assessing who and how we are and what we want our lives to be. The Revival was written to help us walk the path to that new world, hopefully a 4th dimensional system. The paradigm shift now occurring on our planet is one of major proportions, one in which every aspect of life is changing. The task now in front of us will be to come together in conversations, take responsibility for our lives, assess the reality we have been living in for many years, and navigate the changes with our eyes on the future. We all know that change over time is continuous. We also know that trying to force change is very difficult when things are running smoothly and quietly. It is during periods of upheaval and challenge that windows of opportunity open and old habits and routines come to an end. These are the moments to embrace new structures in every sector of life from food, education, governance, and medicine to science, the arts, technology, and our view of the planet and solar system. These are the times to seize the day, make new decisions, try new things, introduce new thinking, and become a new human living in a new and revitalized reality system on Planet Earth. The Revival is about taking the opportunity to explore yourself, what you contribute, how you think, what your attitudes and biases are, The goal is to make you more conscious of what we are doing and what we could be doing, must be doing. Join in and become a new human!
£23.47
Readerlink Distribution Services, LLC On the Origin of Species
Book SynopsisThese pages include the final edition of Charles Darwin’s groundbreaking work that introduced the theory of evolution by means of natural selection.First published in 1859, Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species introduced the scientific theory of evolution by means of natural selection, a revolutionary idea at the time. Fiercely debated on its release, Darwin’s famous work was revised several times over the following decade, partly to refute the scientific and religious objections of the author’s contemporaries. In this sixth edition of On the Origin of Species, Darwin lays out his theory by citing his studies done in the Galápagos aboard the HMS Beagle in the 1830s, as well as his follow-up research over the ensuing two decades.
£10.44
WestBow Press The Last Pillars of Darwinian Evolution Falsified: Further Evidence Proving Darwinian Evolution Wrong
£17.53
Lulu.com Essential Animals
£12.39
WTM Publishing & Communications Pty Ltd THE Interview That Solves The Human Condition And Saves The World!
£9.37
Sapling Books The Origin of Species (Royal Collector's Edition) (Annotated) (Case Laminate Hardcover with Jacket)
£29.95
Benediction Classics The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to
Book Synopsis
£31.42
Sola Scriptura Ministries International The Faces of Origins: A Historical Survey of the Underlying Assumptions from the Early Church to the Twenty-First Century
£12.34
Checkpoint Press HUMANTRUTH Volume One: A World In Crisis
£14.82
Cranmore Publications The Mechanisms of Evolution: A Critique of the Neo-Darwinian Modern Synthesis
£11.61
The Blackburn Press Development and Evolution: Including Psychophysical, Evolution, Evolution by Orthoplasy, and the Theory of Genetic Modes
£43.77
Discovery Institute The Myth of Junk DNA
£11.00
Discovery Institute Science and Human Origins
£11.00
Discovery Institute Foresight: How the Chemistry of Life Reveals Planning and Purpose
£13.68
One 70 Press Janus: A Summing Up
£16.99
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Patternism
£25.38
Oxygen Publishing Return of the Avatars: The Cosmic Architect Tools of Our Future Becoming
£15.82
Zouev Elite Publishing IB Environmental Systems and Societies [ESS] Internal Assessment: The Definitive IA Guide for the International Baccalaureate [IB] Diploma
£29.99
Springer Nature Switzerland AG The Never-Ending Story of Life: A Brief Journey
Book SynopsisFor humankind, the most irreducible idea is the concept of life itself. In order to understand that life is essentially an infinite process, transmitted from generation to generation, this book takes the reader on a fascinating journey that unravels one of our greatest mysteries. It begins with the premise that life is a fact—that it is everywhere; that it takes infinite forms; and, most importantly, that it is intrinsically self-perpetuating. Rather than exploring how the first living forms emerged in our universe, the book begins with our first primordial ancestor cell and tells the story of life—how it began, when that first cell diversified into many other cell types and organisms, and how it has continued until the present day. On this journey, the author covers the fundaments of biology such as cell division, diversity, regeneration, repair and death. The rather fictional epilogue even goes one step further and discusses ways how to literally escape the problem of limited recourse and distribution on our planet by looking at life outside the solar system. This book is designed to explain complex ideas in biology simply, but not simplistically, with a special emphasis on plain and accessible language as well as a wealth of hand-drawn illustrations. Thus, it is suitable not only for students seeking for an introduction into biological concepts and terminology, but for everyone with an interest in the fundamentals of life at the crossroad of evolutionary and cell biology. Table of ContentsChapter 1. The Origin of Eukaryotic Cells and Multicellular OrganismsFirst signs of life on Earth were most probably in form of unicellular organisms that rapidly diverged into different types while adapting to all conceivable environments. From those, the first eukaryotic cells appeared giving rise to the origin of multicellular organisms that after an unimaginable series of changes and adaptations ended in what we know today as fungi, plants and animals. This chapter explains how this long and complex process most probably happened in the last billions of years since the origin of life. Chapter 2. Multicellular Organisms Propagation The essential principle of life perpetuation through uninterrupted life cycles of individual organisms is described in detail. During this process, life flows by acquiring many forms such as the gametes formed by individuals, gamete fusion (egg fertilization), embryogenesis, growth and development, adulthood, sexual maturation and again, another cycle of life is initiated. Nevertheless, the key factor for this process to operate is based in the basic principle that individuals have a finite life span while life is propagated indefinitely. Chapter 3. Grow Fast and Well or Die Right after fertilization, most organism’s early growth and development in general needs to happen very quickly. Why? Because most organisms are autonomous life forms from the very beginning of their existence. In this chapter the main strategies for multicellular organisms to produce enough offspring that would contribute to the next generation and therefore to become fertile and procreate will be described. Most remarkable, despite of the evident diversity that exists among animal species (insects, mollusks, crustaceans, birds, reptile and mammals) the fundamental principles that apply during the reproductive process are very similar. Chapter 4. Why Do Animals Grow, Age and then Die? As simple as it sounds, the main purpose of the multicellular organism—that is, the body of an animal—is to ensure that life will continue by ensuring transfer into the next generation. Nonetheless, from the biological point of view, life is long enough for most organisms to have a chance to grow, mature, learn, have experiences, and mate with the right reproductive partner. If this last thing occurs, the organisms can produce descendants to enhance chances of perpetuation. Once this is finish, each organism has accomplished their main purpose and therefore their remaining time will depend on how fast age, become dysfunctional and die. Chapter 5. How Do Tissues Regenerate After an Injury? Tissues and organs naturally regenerate through the processes called tissue and organ homeostatic regeneration or physiological regeneration. We also know that different tissues undergo homeostatic regeneration at different speeds, and can be classified as having faster, medium, or slower regeneration rates. Now, the question is what happens to tissues’ capacity for regeneration after tissue injury (trauma). This type of post-traumatic regeneration is called pathological regeneration and it will depend of each tissue of how it regenerates or not by forming a scar tissue. Chapter 6. Epilogue: The Future of Humankind Could Depend on Unicellular Life It is very clear for most of us that life in our planet is becoming more and more restricted in terms of having enough resources to support everyone subsistence. This without question could cause in the near future a massive crisis for survival. But before this would happen we could have one or two more chances to survive. Our first option is to solve our population growth dynamics and the second is to prepare ourselves for a long trip to other words, outside our solar system. Both scenarios are considered to evaluate how we can contribute to the never-ending story of life.
£31.34
Springer Nature Switzerland AG Soil Grown Tall: The Epic Saga of Life from Earth
Book SynopsisThis book is designed as an easy night's read and introduction to fossil soils and the relatively new disciplines of Paleopedology and Astropedology. It includes line art and color illustrations to visualize the topic for the informed layperson or interested colleagues. It provides comprehensive information on paleosols, which are soils of the past providing a variety of clues to the evolution of life and climate on Earth and deals with topics such as the evolution of grassland ecosystems, mass extinction of the Late Permian and origin of life, all viewed from the perspective of the fossil record of soils. This turns out to be a refreshing new perspective of wide interest.Trade Review“Soil Grown Tall, reviewed here, is a shorter summary intended for a wider audience. … Retallack’s book is well stuffed with insights and ideas, some quite startling. … The book shines with a sense of the beauty of landscape, which has served Retallack well. The book is full of well-chosen reminiscences, which lend life to the narrative. … The book is clearly written, well illustrated, and well produced.” (Egbert Giles Leigh, Evolution, Education & Outreach, Vol. 15 (1), 2022)Table of ContentsChapter 1. Rainbow rocks Chapter 2. Soil as a many splendored thing Chapter 3. Civilization built from soil Chapter 4. Humanity from global change Chapter 5. Grass that changed the world Chapter 6. Death from the sky Chapter 7. An occasion for flowers Chapter 8. Dinosaurs and dirt Chapter 9. World's greatest mid-life crisis Chapter 10. Roots of trees Chapter 11. Mighty millipedes Chapter 12. Lichens and till Chapter 13. When the rust set in Chapter 14. Soils in space Chapter 15. Living soil Chapter 16. The Proserpina Principle Further Reading Index
£28.49
Springer The Development of Evolutionary Genetics
Book SynopsisBefore Darwin's Origin of Species.- Darwin and the Origin of Species.- Hybridization from the Earliest Times Till Darwin.- Galton's Theory of Heredity.- The Theories of Heredity of Nägeli, Weismann, and de Vries.- Mendel's Theory of Heredity.- Introduction to the Biometry-Saltationism Debate.- Biometry-Saltationism Controversies During the Pre-Mendelian Period.- Biometry-Saltationism Controversies in the Immediate Post-Mendelian Period.- Round 6: Attempted ReconcilIation Between Mendel's and Ancestral Laws: The Birth of the (Hardy-Weinberg) Equilibrium Law (Yule 1902, Castle 1903, Pearson 1904, Hardy 1908, Weinberg 1908).- Round 7: The Darbishire Affair (1902-1905).- Round 8: The Johannsen Breakthrough - Pure-Line Theory (1903), Gene and Genotype-Phenotype Distinction (1909).- Stages Leading to The Modern Synthesis.- Modern Synthesis (1): The Contributions of Fisher.- Modern Synthesis (2): The Contributions of Wright.- Modern Synthesis (3): The Contributions of Haldane.
£189.99
Springer Hierarchical EvolutionaryDevelopmental Theory
Book SynopsisChapter 1: Introduction: Hierarchical Evolutionary-Developmental Theory (H-Evo-Devo Theory).- Part 1: The History of the H-Evo-Devo Theory.- Chapter 2: The Role of Typology and Constraints in the Formation of the Natural System.- Chapter 3: Hierarchical Evolutionary Synthesis.- Part 2: Hierarchies and Evolution.- Chapter 4: Challenging Traditional Hierarchies of Evolution.- Chapter 5: The Structure of the H-Evo-Devo Theory.- Part 3: The Units of Evolution: Philosophical Criteria.- Chapter 6: Criteria for Recognizing Units of Evolution.- Chapter 7: Units of Evolution (I): Subspecies and Species.- Chapter 8: Units of Evolution (II): Higher taxa and Homologues.- Part 4: Challenging Evolutionary Statements.- Chapter 9: Patterns and Rates: Challenging Gradualism and Punctuated Equilibrium.- Chapter 10: Divergence and Levels: Challenging Allopatric Speciation and the Extrapolationist Premise.- Part 5: The Levels of Evolution: Biological Processes.- Chapter 11: Levels of Evolution (I): Microevolution and Macroevolution.- Chapter 12: Levels of Evolution (II): Megaevolution and Modular-Evolution.
£132.99
Springer Art or Scribbles In the Eye of the Beholder The Evolutionary Emergence of Visual Communication
Book SynopsisChapter 1: Art or Scribbles.- Chapter 2: Art is too important to be left to those who are interested in art.- Chapter 3: Art, rock art or not art.- Chapter 4: Art and communication.- Chapter 5: Graphic elements in communication.- Chapter 6: Meaning, expectations, agents and scenes.- Chapter 7: Painting by numbers. Seven Types of Ambiguity in Art.- Chapter 8: But is it Art—let me count the ways.- Chapter 9: Art and archeohistory of Sahul (the continent of greater Australia and New Guinea).- Chapter 10: a thousand words.
£132.99
De Gruyter Principles of Visual Anthropology
Book SynopsisThis edition contains 27 articles, written by scholars and filmmakers who are generally acknowledged as the international authorities in the field, and a new preface by the editor. The book covers ethnographic filming and its relations to the cinema and television; applications of filming to anthropological research, the uses of still photography, archives, and videotape; subdisciplinary applications in ethnography, archeology, bio-anthropology, museology and ethnohistory; and overcoming the funding problems of film production.Table of ContentsINTRODUCTIONVisual Anthropology in a Discipline of Words Margaret Mead ETHNOGRAPHIC FILMING AND THE CINEMAThe History of Ethnographic Film Emilie de Brigard Feature Films as Cultural Documents John H. Weakland McCarty’s Law and How to Break it Mark Mc Carty SOME RECENT APPROACHES TO ANTHROPOLOGICAL FILMThe Camera and Man Jean Rouch Observational Cinema Colin Young Beyond Observational Cinema David MacDougall Idea and Event in Urban Film John Marshall and Emile de BrigardResearch Filming of Naturally Occuring Phenomena: Basic Strategies E. Richard Sorenson and Allison Jablonko VISUAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE PASTEthnographic Film and History Jean Dominique Lajoux Reconstructing Cultures on Film Asen BalikciThe Role of Film in Archeology Stuart StrueverEthnographic Photography in Anthropological Research Joanna Cohan SchererOur Totemic Ancestors and Crazed Masters Jean Rouch SOME SPECIALIZED USES OF FILM AND VIDEOTAPEPhotography and Visual Anthropology John Collier Jr.Videotape: New Techniques of Observation and Analysis in Anthropology Joseph H. SchaefferFilming Body Behavior J. H. ProstAudiovisual Tools for the Analysis of Culture Style Alan LomaxFilm in Ethnographic Research Timothy Asch and Patsy Asch THE PRESENTATION OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL INFORMATIONEthnographies on the Airwaves: The Presentation of Anthropology on American, British, Belgian and Japanese Television Faye GinsburgThe First Videotheque Yasuhiro OmoriFunding Ethnographic Film and Video Productions in America Sabine Jell-Bahlsen Ethnographic Filmmaking for Japanese Television Yasuko IchiokaMatters of Fact Roger Sandall THE FUTURE OF VISUAL ANTHROPOLOGYThe Tribal Terror of Self-Awareness Edmund CarpenterVisual Record, Human Knowledge, and the Future E. Richard SorensonConclusion: Ethnographic Filming and Anthropological Theory Paul Hockings
£30.40
Hansebooks The variation of animals and plants under
Book Synopsis
£35.06
Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG Das älteste Glücksspiel: Eine kurze
Book SynopsisSex prägt wesentlich unser Bild einer lebendigen Natur. Entstanden vor Milliarden Jahren, spielt die Sexualität die Rolle eines Zufallsgenerators, welcher in jeder Generation Erbgut neu zusammenwürfelt. Sie gleicht einem Rüttler, der für die Durchlässigkeit des Siebes der natürlichen Selektion sorgt. Sex tritt bei jeder Art in einer besonderen, durch ihre evolutionäre Geschichte und Lebensweise geprägten Form in Erscheinung. All diesen Formen ist gemeinsam, dass nur das Zusammenwirken zweier Partner erfolgreich sein kann. Dennoch kann aus dieser Kooperation Ungleichheit und heftige Konkurrenz entstehen. Dieses Buch erklärt darüber hinaus, wieso Sexualität bei mehrzelligen Lebewesen oft mit Metamorphose, Brutfürsorge oder Brutpflege verbunden wird, worin der Unterschied zwischen Arten, Rassen und genetischer Vielfalt besteht, dass Geschlechterrollen und -stereotypen austauschbar sind und worauf es bei der Partnerwahl wirklich ankommt.Table of ContentsVorwort.- Sex - theoretisch gesehen.- Fremde Gene - Chancen und Risiko.- Bakterieller Sex - vielfältig doch selten.- Sanfter Zwang zur Zweisamkeit.- Das Individuum schlägt zurück.- Fürsorge.- Sex und das Werden des Menschen.- Wie Sex die Hemmungen der Konkurrenz umgeht.- Glossar.
£21.53
Springer Geschlecht im Wandel Eine interdisziplinäre Reise
Book Synopsis- Sexismus.- Sexuelle Identität.- Wer mit wem?- Warum unterscheiden sich die Geschlechter?- Gibt es einen Unterschied, und wenn ja, warum?- Geschlechtliche Diversität.- Vom Mutterleib bis ins Grab.- Eine Spezies.- Verhalten.- Kultur + Geschlecht = Genderungleichheit?- Erklärungsansätze und Ausblick.- Biology meets Culture.
£27.99
LIWI Literatur- und Wissenschaftsverlag Charles Darwin Über die Entstehung der Arten. Vollständige Neuausgabe
£14.16
Delhi Open Books The Descent of Man
£33.15
Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial Sapiens. De animales a dioses / Sapiens: A Brief
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£18.28
£237.49
Springer A Legacy for Living Systems: Gregory Bateson as Precursor to Biosemiotics
Book SynopsisGregory Bateson’s contribution to 20th century thinking has appealed to scholars from a wide range of fields dealing in one way or another with aspects of communication and epistemology. A number of his insights were taken up and developed further in anthropology, psychology, evolutionary biology and communication theory. But the large, trans-disciplinary synthesis that, in his own mind, was his major contribution to science received little attention from the mainstream scientific communities. This book represents a major attempt to revise this deficiency. Scholars from ecology, biochemistry, evolutionary biology, cognitive science, anthropology and philosophy discuss how Bateson's thinking might lead to a fruitful reframing of central problems in modern science. Most important perhaps, Bateson's bioanthropology is shown to play a key role in developing the set of ideas explored in the new field of biosemiotics. The idea that organismic life is indeed basically semiotic or communicative lies at the heart of the biosemiotic approach to the study of life. The only book of its kind, this volume provides a key resource for the quickly-growing substratum of scholars in the biosciences, philosophy and medicine who are seeking an elegant new approach to exploring highly complex systems.Trade ReviewFrom the reviews: "In this book are collected 14 essays on a range of topics related to, applying, or extending Bateson’s work and legacy. … Open minded biologists and semioticians, as well as students of Peirce, will be interested … in this book. … I recommend it highly." (Phillip Guddemi, Cybnetics and Human Knowing, Vol. 15 (3-4), 2008) "Biosemiotics studies the ‘sign character’ of processes ‘inside or between living systems,’ from a single cell, to organisms, to ecological systems … . The introduction and the 14 chapters of this book are well written and generally understandable by a nonexpert in biosemiotics or Bateson’s work." (H. I. Kilov, ACM Computing Reviews, April, 2009)Table of ContentsAcknowledgement.- List of contributors.- Introduction; J. Hoffmeyer.- 1. Angels fear revisited. Gregory Bateson’s cybernetic theory of mind applied to religion-science debates. Introduction. Bateson's redefinition of mind. Bateson as a scientist. Kinds of messages. Bateson and religion. Logical types in mental process. Discussion. References; M.C. Bateson.- 2. From thing to relation. On Bateson's bioanthropology. A deep symmetry. Creatura and pleroma. Relative being. A minded nature. Notes. References; J. Hoffmeyer.- 3. What connects the map to the territory? Bateson’s large synthesis. What goes from territory to map? An unresolved ambiguity. How to resolve the ambiguity. Abstraction. The epistemic cut. Ding an sich. The hands and the mind. How does it work? Conclusion. References; T. Cashman.- 4. The pattern which connects pleroma to creatura: the autocell bridge from physics to life. Introduction. The problem with protocells. The thermodynamic universe. Thermodynamics plus shape: iased molecular interactions. From thermodynamics to morphodynamics. Autocatalysis: a morphodynamic chain reaction. Molecular self-assembly. Autocell functions. The birth of evolvable teleodynamics. Discussion. Individuality. Value, purpose, end directedness and for-ness. Adaptation, function, and aboutness. Conclusions. References; T. Deacon, J. Sherman.- 5. Bateson’s method: double description. What is it? How does it work? What do we learn?. Introduction. Double desciption. Abduction. Logical types. The pattern which connects. Conclusions. Acknowledgements. References; J. Hui et al.- 6. Gregory Bateson's relevance to current molecular biology. Was Gregory Bateson a biologist? Reductionism in biology. From genome sequence to higher hierarchical levels. An integrative concept of 'biological information'.The problem of delimiting a semiotic network. From the binding of single molecules to complex 'locks-and-keys'. Where is regulation? Global and hierarchical regulation. Conclusions. References; L. Bruni.- 7. Process ecology: creatura at large in an open universe. Occidental pathway? Barriers to the sacred. The aleatoric nature. A cybernetic world. A transactional ecology. An ecological metaphysic. Fading issues. Conclusion: new and renewed dialogs. References; R.E. Ulanowicz.- 8. Connections in action – bridging implicit and explicit domains. Introduction. Connectedness in action - the CIA-hypothesis. The interpretation of PMv actication. The question of manipulability. Effects on conceptual task solving. Discussion. Acknowledgement. References; T.S.S. Shilhab, C. Gerlach.- 9. Bateson: biology with meaning. Information and the genome. The changing story of the gene. Biology, meaning, and language. Nature and culture. Meaning, beauty, and archetypes. References; B. Goodwin.- 10. Gregory Bateson's 'uncovery' of ecological aesthetics . Introduction. The U.N. millenial ecosystem assessment report. Aesthetics and the MA report. Aesthetics and Gregory Bateson. A new interface? The National Park Issue. Some theoretical issues about aesthetics. Scanning the interface. Conclusion. Notes. References; P. Harries-Jones.- 11. Collapsing the wave function of meaning: the epistemological matrix of talk-in-interaction. Introduction: no more words. Language as Newtonian 'Natural Law'. Boiling clean the data set of languaged interaction. A cybernetic modeling of language as an 'ecology of signs'. Fundaments of system order: the contingent responsivity of turn-taking. Transiently emergent order: transition relevance points. Stepping into the immediate next: adjacency pair interaction. Place as meaning: the stigmergy and structure of sequence
£208.99
Springer Scuttle Flies: The Phoridae
Book SynopsisPhoridae are probably the insect family with the greatest diversity of larval habits, but the least studied of the large families of flies due to identification difficulties. This book collates what is known about the natural history of the Phoridae world. It reviews eggs and oviposition, larval habits (including saprophages, kleptoparasites, fungus breeders, plant feeders, predator, parasitoids, parasites and enemies), pupae and their enemies, development, adult habits (including feeding, special associations, courtship, mating, phoretic mites and enemies) and ecological aspects. There follows a new user-friendly and extensively illustrated key to world genera and a review of the identification literature for each of the 229 genera recognized. A review of methods and an extensive bibliography complete the work.Trade Review` ... well worth having a look between the covers.' The Bulletin of the Amateur Entomologists' Society `This book is a tremendous achievement and represents virtually our total knowledge of the family in all its aspects and indicates where further work lies waiting. It provides a sure foundation for all future studies.' Entomologist's Monthly MagazineTable of ContentsColour plates p. 20, 21. Foreword. Preface. 1. Introduction. 2. Eggs. 3. Larvae. 4. Pupae. 5. Development. 6. Adults. 7. Ecology. 8. Identification. 9. Methods. References. Author Index. Phoridae index. Index of other organisms. Subject index.
£54.99
Springer The Eurasian Huchen, Hucho hucho: Largest Salmon
Book SynopsisThe need to gather available data on the Eurasien huchen - an important salmonid species - has been forced by a plain and, unfortunately, common fact of our times: the numbers and distribution of this biggest of salmonids have begun to decline and its range has begun to shrink. A seminar on the huchen - the European form of the species Hucha hucha - held in Zilina in February 1973 as a result of a suggestion of the Section for the Conservation of Fauna of the Slovak Zoological Society, indicated very clearly the sad situation. Data on the biology of the huchen are regrettably scarce despite several recent papers (Ivaska 1951, Svetina 1962, Prawochenski and Kolder 1968) with the aim of filling this gap. Supposing that without a thorough knowledge it is practically impossible to conserve any plant or animal species, the participants of the seminar concluded that the existing knowledge on the huchen should be compiled in an exhaustive monograph. The first such outline originated in 1977 under the authorship of J. Holcik, K. Hensel and L. Skacel, and was submitted as a research report to some of the central authorities. Even during the compilation of the report it became evident, however, that there is no difference between the huchen and its relative, the taimen. Consequently, we immediately began revising our first report, which took over three years.Trade ReviewI highly recommend the book to those interested in salmonids, for zoologists involved with the specialized areas of the book, and for libraries. It delivers a sound message - to save the huchen - and serves a valuable function in bringing together the extensive literature of this species of superlatives. Copeia, 2, 1991Table of ContentsI — Taxonomy, Systematics and Evolution.- 1. Nomenclature.- 2. Taxonomy and Systematics.- 3. Origin, Evolution and Phylogeny.- 4. Vernacular Names.- 5. Morphology.- 6. Protein Specificity.- II — Distribution.- 7. Geographical Distribution.- 8. Habitat.- III — Bionomics and Ecology.- 9. Reproduction and Development.- 10. Age and Growth.- 11. Trophic Ecology.- 12. Predation.- 13. Predators and Enemies.- 14. Population.- 15. Migration and Territory.- 16. Diseases, Parasites, Abnormalities and Injuries.- 17. Hardiness.- 18. Present Status.- IV — Utilization.- 19. Economic Importance and Exploitation.- 20. Protection and Management.- 21. Introduction and Acclimatization.- 21.1. Results of Experiments with Introduction and Acclimatization.- 21.2. Principles of Huchen Introduction.- V — Farming.- 22. History.- 23. Huchen Farm.- 24. Technology of Parent Fish Breeding.- 25. Artificial Reproduction.- 26. Egg Incubation and Hatching.- 27. Rearing Young Huchen.- 28. Rearing Recruits.- 29. Sanitary Problems.- 30. Dispatch and Transport.- Epilogue.- References.- Index of Scientific Names.- Index of Geographical Names.
£170.99
Castalia House Darwinism, Dogma, and Cultural Evolution
£15.99
www.bnpublishing.com Problem of Increasing Human Energy
£8.99
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