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Viser: The Evolution of Biological Information - How Evolution Creates Complexity, from Viruses to Brains
The Evolution of Biological Information Vital Source e-bog
Christoph Adami
(2024)
The Evolution of Biological Information
How Evolution Creates Complexity, from Viruses to Brains
Christoph Adami
(2024)
om ca. 15 hverdage
Detaljer om varen
- Vital Source searchable e-book (Fixed pages)
- Udgiver: Princeton University Press (Januar 2024)
- ISBN: 9780691241159
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Detaljer om varen
- Paperback: 584 sider
- Udgiver: Princeton University Press (Januar 2024)
- ISBN: 9780691241142
Why information is the unifying principle that allows us to understand the evolution of complexity in nature
More than 150 years after Darwin's revolutionary On the Origin of Species, we are still attempting to understand and explain the amazing complexity of life. Although we now know how evolution proceeds to build complexity from simple ingredients, quantifying this complexity is still a difficult undertaking. In this book, Christoph Adami offers a new perspective on Darwinian evolution by viewing it through the lens of information theory. This novel theoretical stance sheds light on such matters as how viruses evolve drug resistance, how cells evolve to communicate, and how intelligence evolves. By this account, information emerges as the central unifying principle behind all of biology, allowing us to think about the origin of life--on Earth and elsewhere--in a systematic manner.
Adami, a leader in the field of computational biology, first provides an accessible introduction to the information theory of biomolecules and then shows how to apply these tools to measure information stored in genetic sequences and proteins. After outlining the experimental evidence of the evolution of information in both bacteria and digital organisms, he describes the evolution of robustness in viruses; the cooperation among cells, animals, and people; and the evolution of brains and intelligence. Building on extensive prior work in bacterial and digital evolution, Adami establishes that (expanding on Dobzhansky's famous remark) nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of information. Understanding that information is the foundation of all life, he argues, allows us to see beyond the particulars of our way of life to glimpse what life might be like in other worlds.