Description
Book SynopsisBy the end of the last century, it was known from microscopic studies that most cells contain small elongated bodies (mitochondria). It has recently been discovered that their true function is as complex organelles possessing inner and outer membranes and even their own DNA.
Trade Review"...the book is indeed recommendable..." (The QuarterlyReview of Biology, December 2004)
"for anyone who wishes to know more about genes and evolutionand go beyond the classic, classroom theory--this is the book foryou...[will] take you on a ride you won't regret."(Heredity, February 2005)
"For anyone who wishes to know more about genes andevolution and go beyond the classic, classroom theory - this is foryou..." (Heredity, Vol. 94, 2005)
"This book is well written and would probably be mainly ofinterest to students of evolution who have a more philosophicalperspective or to philosophy students interested inevolution." (American Journal of Human Genetics,September 2004)
"This book is highly suited to students and scientists in arange of fields who want to understand how evolution works throughgenetics." (E-STREAMS, August 2004)
"This book represents a valiant effort in expanding evolutionarythinking in many biological specialties." (Choice, June2004, Vol. 41 No. 10)
Table of ContentsPreface.
Acknowledgments.
I. UNDERSTANDING BIOLOGICAL COMPLEXITY: Basic Concepts andPrinciples.
1. Prospect: The Basic Postulates of Life.
2. Conceptual and Analytic Approaches to Evolution.
3. Evolution By Phenotype: How Change Happens in Life.
II. BUILDING BLOCKS OF LIFE: A Genetic Repertoire for EvolvingComplexity.
4. The Storage and Flow of Biological Information.
5. Genotypes and Phenotypes.
6. A Cell is Born.
7. A Repertoire of Basic Genetic Mechanisms.
III. AN INTERNAL AWARENESS OF SELF: Communication withinOrganisms.
8. Making More of Life: The Many Aspects of Reproduction.
9. Scaling Up: How Cells Build an Organism.
10. Communicating Between Cells.
11. Detecting and Destroying Internal Invaders.
IV. EXTERNAL AWARENESS: Information Transfer between Environmentto Organism.
12. Detecting Physical Variability in the Environment.
13. Chemical Signaling and Sensation from the Outside World.
14. Detecting Light.
15. The Development and Structure of Nervous Systems.
16. Perceiving: Integrating Signals from the Environment.
V. FINALE: Evolutionary Order and Disorder between Phenotypesand Genotypes.
17. A Great Chain of Beings.
References.
Index.