Total Number of Books in Collection Library : 127

 

Page number: 27
 

The FIFTH MIRACLE: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life

Author: Paul Davies
ISBN: 068486309X
Publisher: Simon & Schuster         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 304
Reader Rating: 4.5 (29 votes)
Release: 2000
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Summary: How did life begin? Did it start here, by blind chance or by necessity, or was Earth seeded by extraterrestrial visitors? (And, if so, how did "they" arise?) Physicist and science writer Paul Davies tackles these heavy questions and more in "The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life", a wide-ranging survey of the field of biogenesis. From the "Martian meteorite" ALH84001 to the hardy microorganisms living on--and under!--our sea beds, Davies looks for evidence pointing toward our first ancestor. His willingness to consider any possibility makes for a fun, fascinating journey through our solar system and beyond.
"The Fifth Miracle" provides convincing arguments that life flourishes, and may indeed have begun, deep within the earth's crust, and not in Darwin's "warm little pond." And if in "our" planet's crust, why not in others'? Indeed, he shows that it is not just possible but likely that living organisms have passed between Earth and Mars embedded within meteorites. Davies's command of the data and his facility with explaining it to nonprofessionals give the lie to his self-description as "a simple-minded physicist" intruding in another's domain. The best scientists hate to see questions finally answered and love to see new ones raised; by that standard (and by any other), "The Fifth Miracle" is a first-rate book of scientific speculation. "--Rob Lightner"


 

Five Equations That Changed the World

Author: Michael Guillen
ISBN: 0349110646
Publisher: Time Warner Books Uk         Place:
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Release: 1999
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From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe

Author: Alexandre Koyre
ISBN: 0801803470
Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 328
Reader Rating: 4.5 (2 votes)
Release: 1968
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During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a radical change occurred in the patterns and the framework of European thought. In the wake of discoveries through the telescope and Copernican theory, the notion of an ordered cosmos of "fixed stars" gave way to that of a universe infinite in both time and space -- with significant and far-reaching consequences for human thought. Alexandre Koyré interprets this revolution in terms of the change that occurred in our conception of the universe and our place in it and shows the primacy of this change in the development of the modern world.


 

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