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On Life: Cells, Genes, and the Evolution of Complexity

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Franklin M. Harold's On Life reveals what science can tell us about the living world.

All creatures, from bacteria and redwoods to garden snails and humans, belong to a single biochemical family. We all operate by the same principles and are all made up of cells, either one or many. We flaunt capacities that far exceed those of inanimate matter, yet we stand squarely within the material world. So what is life, anyway? How do living things function, and how did they come into existence? Questions like these have baffled philosophers and scientists since antiquity, but over the past half-century answers have begun to emerge.

Offering an inside look, Franklin M. Harold makes life accessible to readers interested in the biological big picture. The book traces how living things operate, focusing on the interplay of biology with physics and chemistry. He asserts that biology stands apart from the physical sciences because life revolves around organization— that is, purposeful order.

On Life aims to make life intelligible by giving readers an understanding of the biological landscape; it sketches the principles as biologists presently understand them and highlights major unresolved issues. What emerges is a biology bracketed by two stubborn mysteries: the nature of the mind and the origin of life. This portrait of biology is comprehensible but inescapably complex, internally consistent, and buttressed by a wealth of factual knowledge.

ISBN-13: 9780197604540

Media Type: Hardcover

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Publication Date: 12-17-2021

Pages: 224

Product Dimensions: 9.56(w) x 6.45(h) x 0.94(d)

Franklin M . Harold is Professor Emeritus of biochemistry at Colorado State University and Affiliate Professor of microbiology at the University of Washington in Seattle. Born in Germany but raised in the Middle East, he moved to the United States and studied chemistry at the City College of New York. After obtaining his BS, he completed a PhD in comparative biochemistry at the University of California, Berkeley, and later held a postdoctoral fellowship at the California Institute of Technology. He has taught and conducted research for over forty years, mostly in Colorado. Now retired, he remains engaged with science as a writer and lecturer. He is the author of four books, most recently: In Search of Cell History (2014) and his autobiography, To Make the World Intelligible (2017).

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments

Part I: The Nature of Living Things
Chapter 1: Strange Objects
Chapter 2: Living Cells, Lifeless Molecules
Chapter 3: Life Makes Itself
Chapter 4: Putting the Cell in Order

Part II: The Web That Weaves Itself
Chapter 5: The Darwinian Outlook
Chapter 6: Evolution of the Cell
Chapter 7: The Perennial Riddle of Life's Origin

Part III: The Gyre of Complexity
Chapter 8: The Expansion of Life
Chapter 9: The Tangled Bank
Chapter 10: From Egg to Organism
Chapter 11: The Outer Banks of Order

Epilogue: Comprehensive, but Complex and Perplexing

Glossary
Notes
References
Index