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Our Cosmic Origins tells the story of our remarkable adventure on this planet, beginning with a single event in the depths of space. It traces the rich and wonderful history of the Universe, from the Big Bang to the creation of atoms and molecules, from the formation of stars and planets to the emergence of life on Earth. Delsemme brings together cosmology, astronomy, geology, biochemistry, and biology to create a unique look at the complex story of the Universe. He chronicles how the first light atoms were made and formed stars and how heavier atoms were cooked in stars and scattered in space, creating dust mrains and organic molecules. He examines the growing eomplexity of plant and animal life, including the emergence and extinction of dinosaurs. Our Cosmic Origins shows how the coupling of eye and brain led to self-awareness and intelligence. It explores the cosmic coincidences that might explain our existence and concludes with the tantalizing suggestion that intelligent alien life is likely. This provocative book will appeal to anyone who has ever looked at the sky and wondered how we got here. Originally published in French, this edition has been revised to include the most recent research in astronomy and cosmology. Armand Delsemme has published four books and over 230 scientific papers. He received a Sigma Xi award for outstanding research and has had, by order of the International Astronomical Union, an asteroid named after him.
In just a half century, humanity has made an astounding leap in its understanding of life. Now, one of the giants of biological science, Christian de Duve, discusses what we've learned in this half century, ranging from the tiniest cells to the future of our species and of life itself. An extraordinarily wise and humane volume, it will fascinate readers curious about the world around them and about the impact of science on philosophy and religion.
Erwin Schrodinger's What is Life? published 60 years ago,
influenced much of the development of molecular biology. In this
new book Christian De Duve, Nobel Laureate and pioneer of modern
cell biology, presents a contemporary response to this classic,
providing a sophisticated consideration of the key steps or
bottlenecks that constrain the origins and evolution of life. De
Duve surveys the entire history of life, including insights into
the conditions that may have led to its emergence. He uses as
landmarks the many remarkable singularities along the way, such as
the single ancestry of all living beings, the universal genetic
code, and the monophyletic origin of eukaryotes. The book offers a
brief guided tour of biochemistry and phylogeny, from the basic
molecular building blocks to the origin of humans. Each successive
singularity is introduced in a sequence paralleling the
hypothetical development of features and conditions on the
primitive earth, explaining how and why each transition to greater
complexity occurred.
Our Cosmic Origins tells the story of our remarkable adventure on this planet, beginning with a single event in the depths of space. It traces the rich and wonderful history of the Universe, from the Big Bang to the creation of atoms and molecules, from the formation of stars and planets to the emergence of life on Earth. Delsemme brings together cosmology, astronomy, geology, biochemistry, and biology to create a unique look at the complex story of the Universe. He chronicles how the first light atoms were made and formed stars and how heavier atoms were cooked in stars and scattered in space, creating dust mrains and organic molecules. He examines the growing eomplexity of plant and animal life, including the emergence and extinction of dinosaurs. Our Cosmic Origins shows how the coupling of eye and brain led to self-awareness and intelligence. It explores the cosmic coincidences that might explain our existence and concludes with the tantalizing suggestion that intelligent alien life is likely. This provocative book will appeal to anyone who has ever looked at the sky and wondered how we got here. Originally published in French, this edition has been revised to include the most recent research in astronomy and cosmology. Armand Delsemme has published four books and over 230 scientific papers. He received a Sigma Xi award for outstanding research and has had, by order of the International Astronomical Union, an asteroid named after him.
Increasingly absorbed in recent years by advances in our
understanding of the origin of life, evolutionary history, and the
advent of humankind, eminent biologist Christian de Duve of late
has also pondered deeply the future of life on this planet. He
speaks to readers with or without a scientific background, offering
new perspectives on the threat posed by humanity's immense
biological success and on the resources human beings have for
altering their current destructive path. Focusing on the process of
natural selection, de Duve explores the inordinate and now
dangerous rise of humankind. His explanation for this
self-defeating success lies in the process of natural selection,
which favors traits that are immediately useful, regardless of
later consequences. Thus, the human genome determines such
properties as tribal and group cohesion and collaboration and often
fierce and irrational competition with and hostility toward other
groups' attributes that were once useful but now often ruinously
dysfunctional. Christian de Duve suggests that these traits,
imprinted into human nature by natural selection, may have been
recognized by the writers of Genesis, thus inspiring the myth of
original sin. Is there redemption for genetic original sin? In a
brilliant and original conclusion, the author argues that, unique
in the living world, humankind is endowed with the ability to
deliberately oppose natural selection. Human beings have the
capacity to devise measures that, while contrary to local or
personal interests, can bring forth a safer world.
Is the emergence of life on Earth the result of a single chance
event or combination of lucky accidents, or is it the outcome of
biochemical forces woven into the fabric of the universe? And if
inevitable, what are these forces, and how do they account not only
for the origin of life but also for its evolution toward increasing
complexity? "Vital Dust" is a groundbreaking history of life on
Earth, a history that only someone of Chrisitian de Duve's stature
and erudition could have written.
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