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Genetic Analysis
A History of Genetic Thinking
Offers a deep and innovative understanding of our ways of thinking about heredity.
Raphael Falk (Author)
9780521884181, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 14 May 2009
344 pages
23.5 x 16 x 2.1 cm, 0.69 kg
"....The book is extremely well written, and also contains an exhaustive bibliography addressing the major concepts of genetics, with historical references for readers interested in the primary literature.... Highly recommended...."
--R.K. Harris, William Carey University, Choice
There is a paradox lying at the heart of the study of heredity. To understand the ways in which features are passed down from one generation to the next, we have to dig deeper and deeper into the ultimate nature of things - from organisms, to genes, to molecules. And yet as we do this, increasingly we find we are out of focus with our subjects. What has any of this to do with the living, breathing organisms with which we started? Organisms are living. Molecules are not. How do we relate one to the other? In Genetic Analysis, one of the most important empirical scientists in the field in the twentieth century attempts, through a study of history and drawing on his own vast experience as a practitioner, to face this paradox head-on. His book offers a deep and innovative understanding of our ways of thinking about heredity.
1. Introduction
2. From reproduction and generation to heredity
3. Faktoren in search of meaning
4. The chromosome theory of inheritance
5. Genes as the atoms of heredity
6. Increasing resolving power
7. Deducing genes from traits, inducing traits from genes
8. What is true for E. coli is not true for the elephant
9. Concluding comments
bibliography.
Subject Areas: Genetics [non-medical PSAK], Philosophy of science [PDA], Philosophy [HP]
