量子進化―脳と進化の謎を量子力学が解く!
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| 価格: | ¥ 1,890 国内配送料無料 (一部の商品、注文方法を除く) 詳細 |
発送可能時期: 在庫あり。
販売、発送は Amazon.co.jp
(4 カスタマーレビュー)
商品の説明
Johnjoe McFadden "enters new and provocative territory in his marriage of physics and biology" (Science News). His simple but staggering theory of quantum evolution shows how quantum mechanics gives living organisms the ability to initiate specific actions, including new mutations. As Paul Davies exclaims, "if these ideas are right, they will transform our understanding of the relationship between physics and biology" and may radically revise the notion of random evolution and the debate over consciousness and free will.
商品の詳細
- Amazon.co.jp ランキング: #223995 / 本
- 発売日: 2003-09
- 版型: 単行本
- 468 ページ
エディターレビュー
内容(「BOOK」データベースより)
生命誕生の鍵は、量子力学にあった。
内容(「MARC」データベースより)
これまでの生物学では十分に説明できなかった謎の数々(生命誕生、生物進化、脳と意識など)を量子力学で解く初の試み。難解な専門用語や数式はいっさい使わず、量子力学の考え方をわかりやすい言葉で紹介する。
Amazon.com
The hairiest heresy of evolutionary biology, the one most likely to get scientists figuratively burned at the stake, is the notion that any force more selective than blind chance could drive mutation. Such "directed evolution" smacks too much of a retreat into creationism for most science-minded readers to be comfortable with, but there's no a priori reason to reject the idea. Molecular biologist Johnjoe McFadden risks the Inquisition by suggesting just such a possibility in Quantum Evolution: The New Science of Life. Directed at a general but somewhat sophisticated readership, the book covers the basics of both standard evolutionary theory and quantum-level physics, then synthesizes them in an interesting theory of made-to-order mutation that explains enough to warrant attention and is, importantly, testable.
McFadden's writing is clear and sharp, and it shows a high regard for the reader's intelligence and patience for complex ideas. This is no airplane book--except for those already well-versed in the latest in both evolutionary theory and subatomic physics. The rewards of reading are great, and the author bows just enough to established theory that he might meet the fate of his intellectual predecessors. The ideas underlying Quantum Evolution may be right or wrong, but they challenge received wisdom without plunging into dogmatism--and that's good science. --Rob Lightner
