Biogenesis
Theories of Life's Origin
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Biogenesis provides a detailed, critical discussion of the modern scientific study of the origin of life. It includes biological, geological, and cosmological background material and explains the rationale behind the main assumptions and experimental strategies.
Preface
Prologue. On Universes, Elements, Planets, and Life
Part I. History of the Search Into the Origin of Life: On the Shoulders of So Many
1. From Myths to Logos to Stagnation
2. Experimental Biology of the 17th Century
3. Systematic Biology, Doubts and Uncertainties: The 18th Century
4. Demise and Resurrection of the Spontaneous Generation School: Pasteur and Darwin
5. The Modern Era: Spontaneous Generation at the Molecular Level
Part II. Central Features of Life as We Know It In Our Phylogenetic Tree
6. A General Morphological-Functional Characterization of the Cell
7. General Chemical, Biochemical, and Molecular-Biological Characterization
8. General Thermodynamic Considerations
9. Central Biochemical Molecules and Processes
10. Biological Conservation and Continuity and the Phylogenetic Tree
11. Biological Life: A Multitude of Points of View
Part III
12. Our Universe, Galaxy and Solar System
13. Planet Earth
Part IV. Beyond the Progenote: Rationale, Strategies, Scenarios, and Models in the Search of the Origin of Life
14. Basic Assumptions and Strategies
15. Clues and Speculations by Back-Extrapolation from Cosmology and Geology
16. Clues From Biology: Evolution, Conservationism, Continuity, and Their Implications
17. Top-Down Reconstruction of Processes and Early Evolutionary Stages without Specific Geochemical Consideration
18. Bottom-Up Reconstruction Without Specific Biogeochemical Conditions
19. Bottom-Up Biogeochemical Reconstruction: Starting From Organic Scratch in the Absence of Minerals
20. Bottom-Up Biogeochemical Reconstruction: Minerals Functioning as Scaffolds, Adsorbents, Catalysts, and Information Carriers
21. Bottom-Up Biogeochemical Reconstructions: Mineral Involvement in Energy Production and Transfer
22. Possible Sites for Molecular Evolution Scenarios and Their Rhythms
23. Computer Modeling of Biogeochemical Scenarios
Noam LahavEmeritus Professor of Origin of life and Soil Science, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"Before we can even address the origin of life, there looms the question of what life is anyway. In Biogenesis, Lahav quotes definitions of life culled from the scientific literature from 1855 to 1997. We see the special concerns of each, from Spenser's emphasis on evolution, to Schrodinger's on the law of physics, to Kauffman's on complexity theory. In pursuit of answers, scientists are using every technique from laboratory experiments to deep sea exploration to computer simulations. The most complete account of every approach and each important concept, theory, and experiment is found in this book. It is an invaluable resource for all serious students of origin-of-life research. Although much of this book is very technical, it is written in a highly accessible style. It is an outstanding contribution to the field." - Lucy Horwitz, Boston Book Review, March 2000 |k No