"Endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and
are being, evolved," Darwin famously concluded "The Origin of
Species," and for confirmation we look to...the guinea pig? How
this curious creature and others as humble (and as fast-breeding)
have helped unlock the mystery of inheritance is the unlikely story
Jim Endersby tells in this book.
Biology today promises everything from better foods or cures for
common diseases to the alarming prospect of redesigning life
itself. Looking at the organisms that have made all this possible
gives us a new way of understanding how we got here--and perhaps of
thinking about where we're going. Instead of a history of which
great scientists had which great ideas, this story of
passionflowers and hawkweeds, of zebra fish and viruses, offers a
bird's (or rodent's) eye view of the work that makes science
possible.
Mixing the celebrities of genetics, like the fruit fly, with
forgotten players such as the evening primrose, the book follows
the unfolding history of biological inheritance from Aristotle's
search for the "universal, absolute truth of fishiness" to the
apparently absurd speculations of eighteenth-century natural
philosophers to the spectacular findings of our day--which may
prove to be the absurdities of tomorrow.
The result is a quirky, enlightening, and thoroughly engaging
perspective on the history of heredity and genetics, tracing the
slow, uncertain path--complete with entertaining diversions and
dead ends--that led us from the ancient world's understanding of
inheritance to modern genetics.
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