How Life Works: A User's Guide to the New Biology

Philip Ball
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How Life Works: A User's Guide to the New Biology

Philip Ball
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Found in: Science & Nature, General Science

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Overview

552 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Feb 20, 2025
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 552
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press
  • ISBN: 9780226840062
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 1.3" L x 9.0" H
Philip Ball is a freelance writer and broadcaster whose many books on the interactions of the sciences, the arts, and the wider culture include Bright Earth, Curiosity, Patterns in Nature, How to Grow a Human, The Modern Myths, The Elements, and, most recently, The Book of Minds, all also published by the University of Chicago Press. His book Critical Mass won the 2005 Aventis Prize for Science Books. Ball is also the 2022 recipient of the Royal Society’s Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar Medal for contributions to the history, philosophy, or social roles of science. He trained as a chemist at the University of Oxford and as a physicist at the University of Bristol, and he was an editor at Nature for more than twenty years. He lives in London.
“In his bold and intriguing How Life Works, the journalist and author Philip Ball tackles the thorny issue of causality in biological systems. While acknowledging formidable advances in our understanding, Ball argues that the structural triumphs of molecular biology and the pervasive language of genes have obscured life’s true nature. . . . Life, he says, ‘will not be found in the genome’; it ‘does not resemble any instruction booklet ever made by humans.’ Living things cannot be reduced to a parts list.”

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