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Conventionally, evolution has always been described in terms of
species. The Chemistry of Evolution takes a novel, not to say
revolutionary, approach and examines the evolution of chemicals and
the use and degradation of energy, coupled to the environment, as
the drive behind it. The authors address the major changes of life
from bacteria to man in a systematic and unavoidable sequence,
reclassifying organisms as chemotypes. Written by the authors of
the bestseller The Biological Chemistry of the Elements - The
Inorganic Chemistry of Life (Oxford University Press, 1991), the
clarity and precision of The Chemistry of Evolution plainly
demonstrate that life is totally interactive with the environment.
This exciting theory makes this work an essential addition to the
academic and public library.
This beautifully written book is a study of the intimate relationship between the inanimate environment and living organisms. It describes how the evolution of both has been interactive and interdependent: the environment and life developed together, The authors show that this can be explained in terms of the properties of the chemical elements and their compounds. It discusses the physical and chemical balances between the animate and inanimate worlds, with kinetic and thermodynamic principles given to support this analysis. These principles are applied to both organic and inorganic chemical systems to provide a basis for understanding the evolution of life in terms of the interaction of both types of chemistry within ever more complex organisations. The book conludes with an examination of an intriguing problem for mankind: the long-term consequences of man's selection and manipulation of chemicals. This may have consequences for the long-term future of life from changes in the environment - not just only due to bulk but also to trace element alterations.
This book describes the long journey from formless inanimate matter to the arrival of life as we know it, explaining the nature and the logic of the physical-chemical processes involved. It stresses the limitations of reductionist analyses of these processes as complexity increases and novel properties emerge. And, in particular, the authors develop the idea that it was chemical change of the environment that allowed evolution of life to occur and that this evolution required successive addition of new message systems and information codes that work cooperatively with earlier systems.
This text describes the functional role of the twenty inorganic elements essential to life in living organisms.
Conventionally, evolution has always been described in terms of
species. The Chemistry of Evolution takes a novel, not to say
revolutionary, approach and examines the evolution of chemicals and
the use and degradation of energy, coupled to the environment, as
the drive behind it. The authors address the major changes of life
from bacteria to man in a systematic and unavoidable sequence,
reclassifying organisms as chemotypes. Written by the authors of
the bestseller The Biological Chemistry of the Elements - The
Inorganic Chemistry of Life, the clarity and precision of The
Chemistry of Evolution plainly demonstrate that life is totally
interactive with the environment. This exciting theory makes this
work an essential addition to the academic and public library.
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