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Focus, Organization, and Content This book, like the first edition,
deals with the mass transport processes that take place in living
systems, with a focus on the normal behavior of eukaryotic cells
and the - ganisms they constitute, in their normal physiological
environment. As a consequence of this focus, the structure and
content of the book differ from those of traditional transport
texts. We do not start with the engineering principles of mass
transport (which are well presented elsewhere) and then seek
biological applications of these principles; rather, we begin with
the biological processes themselves, and then - velop the models
and analytical tools that are needed to describe them. This
approach has several consequences. First of all, it drives the
content of the text in a direction distinctively different from
conventional transport texts. This is - cause the tools and models
needed to describe complex biological processes are often different
from those employed to describe more well-characterized inanimate
systems. Many biological processes must still be described
phenomenologically, using me- odologies like nonequilibrium
thermodynamics. Simple electrical analogs employing a paucity of
parameters can be more useful for characterization and prediction
than complex theories based on the behavior of more well-defined
systems on a laboratory bench. By allowing the biology to drive the
choice of analysis tools and models, the latter are consistently
presented in the context of real biological systems, and analysis
and biology are interwoven throughout.
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