Science as a Way of Knowing: The Foundations of Modern Biology

Cover
Harvard University Press, 1993 - 530 Seiten
For the past twenty-five years John Moore has taught biology instructors how to teach biology--by emphasizing the questions people have asked about life through the ages and the ways natural philosophers and scientists have sought the answers. This book makes Moore's uncommon wisdom available to students in a lively and richly illustrated account of the history and workings of life. Employing a breadth of rhetoric strategies--including vividly written case histories, hypotheses and deductions, and chronological narrative--Science as a Way of Knowing provides not only a cultural history of biology but also a splendid introduction to the procedures and values of science.
 

Inhalt

Introduction
1
UNDERSTANDING NATURE
9
Aristotle and the Greek View of Nature
30
Those Rational Greeks?
43
The JudeoChristian Worldview
59
The Revival of Science
77
Figurd Stones and Plastick Virtue
102
THE GROWTH
129
Fertilization
279
Mendel and the Birth of Genetics
285
19001910
304
The Genetics of the Fruit
328
The Structure and Function of Genes
360
THE ENIGMA OF DEVELOPMENT
385
The Century of Discovery
403
Descriptive Embryology
419

Testing Darwins Hypotheses
138
Have Life Forms Changed over Time?
148
Has There Been Time Enough for Evolution?
157
The Genetic Basis of Natural Selection
166
Life over Time
192
CLASSICAL GENETICS
231
The Cell Theory
252
The Technology of Cell Research
261
The Dawn of Analytical Embryology
442
Interactions during Development
470
Conclusion
501
Further Reading
507
Illustration Credits
523
192
525
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Autoren-Profil (1993)

John A. Moore was the author of numerous textbooks in genetics and development and Emeritus Professor of Biology at the University of California, Riverside.

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