
Chimeras and Consciousness
Evolution of the Sensory Self
$96.02
- Paperback
344 pages
- Release Date
22 April 2011
Summary
Scientists elucidate the astounding collective sensory capacity of Earth and its evolution through time.
Chimeras and Consciousness begins the inquiry into the evolution of the collective sensitivities of life. Scientist-scholars from a range of fields—including biochemistry, cell biology, history of science, family therapy, genetics, microbial ecology, and primatology—trace the emergence and evolution of consciousness. Complex behaviors and the social imperatives of ba…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780262515832 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0262515830 |
| Author: | Lynn Margulis, Celeste A. Asikainen, Wolfgang E. Krumbein, Frank P. Ryan, William Day, Antonio Lazcano, Arturo Becerra, Luis Delaye, Kenneth H. Nealson, Eshel Ben-Jacob |
| Publisher: | MIT Press Ltd |
| Imprint: | MIT Press |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 344 |
| Release Date: | 22 April 2011 |
| Weight: | 476g |
| Dimensions: | 14mm x 152mm x 229mm |
| Series: | The MIT Press |
| Audience Age: | 18 |

Critics Review
“Chimeras and Consciousness is not just another conference book; it is a transformation of world-view. If you believe that the cell is an information-processing machine for reading the genetic code, if you think that evolution is a struggle of discrete units to survive long enough to reproduce, if you think the human world, like Maxwell’s Demon, is a difference engine for sorting out creatures in a competitive market place of rational self-interest, if you think the immune system is a military force defending Self against Other, or if you think the nation-state is threatened by the infection of the Other in the form of alien immigrants, then you need this book, for everything you think is wrong. This is a book that, like Darwin’s Origin, changes everything.” William Irwin Thompson , poet, cultural historian, and founder of the Lindisfarne Association “I consider this to be an extremely important collection of papers that could change the nature of the currently unhealthy and unhelpful arguments about evolution…It is a rich introduction to a vast field of research still little known to the general public and insufficiently appreciated by mainstream scientists.” from the foreword by John B. Cobb Jr. “In this volume a group of bold and imaginative scholars probe the edges of the paradigm to investigate the ‘hard problem’ of consciousness by exploring its evolutionary roots from deep in the microbial world to its cultural embodiments. This is a new view of the biosphere, natural philosophy at its most challenging.” Harold J. Morowitz , Robinson Professor of Biology and Natural Philosophy, George Mason University “The message from editors Margulis, Asikainen, and Krumbein is an important one for numerous disciplines, biology, environmental science, philosophy, and theology among them. Undoubtedly, this book will also make a significant contribution to the study of our own species. In a palpable sense, it will help re-define what it means to be human in the context of 30 million co-evolved organisms on an ancient Earth system.” Bruce Rinker , ecologist, science educator, and explorer; co-editor of Gaia in Turmoil
Lynn Margulis
Lynn Margulis (1938– 2011) was Distinguished Professor of Botany at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. An evolutionary theorist and biologist, science author, and educator, Margulis was the modern originator of the symbiotic theory of cell evolution. Once considered heresy, her ideas are now part of the microbiological revolution. Celeste A. Asikainen, a geologist, is the administrator of the Margulis Laboratory and a doctoral student. Wolfgang E. Krumbein, formerly at Oldenburg University in Germany, is counted among the founders of geomicrobiology and biogeochemistry, new scientific fields especially relevant to global climate and planetary biology. Alfred I. Tauber is the Zoltan Kohn Professor of Medicine, Professor of Philosophy, and Director of the Center for Philosophy and History of Science at Boston University. Wolfgang E. Krumbein, formerly at Oldenburg University in Germany, is counted among the founders of geomicrobiology and biogeochemistry, new scientific fields especially relevant to global climate and planetary biology. Celeste A. Asikainen, a geologist, is the administrator of the Margulis Laboratory and a doctoral student. Lynn Margulis (1938– 2011) was Distinguished Professor of Botany at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. An evolutionary theorist and biologist, science author, and educator, Margulis was the modern originator of the symbiotic theory of cell evolution. Once considered heresy, her ideas are now part of the microbiological revolution.
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