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The Music of Life: Biology Beyond Genes



The author of this essay, Denis Noble, argues that the gene's view of life, which sees living bodies as mere vehicles for the replication of genetic codes, is not the only way to look at life. He asserts that life is a symphonic interplay between genes, cells, organs, body, and environment, and that the gene's view is only one perspective on this interplay. He introduces readers to the realm of sy... more details
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  • Denis Noble argues that the gene's view of life, which sees living bodies as mere vehicles for the replication of genetic codes, is not the only way to look at life. He asserts that life is a symphonic interplay between genes, cells, organs, body, and environment, and that the gene's view is only one perspective on this interplay.
  • Noble introduces readers to the realm of systems biology, a field that has been growing in strength in the past decade, and argues that modern systems biology may be the view we need to adopt to gain a deeper understanding of the nature of life. Drawing on his experiences in his research on the heartbeat, and on evolutionary biology, development, medicine, philosophy, linguistics, and Chinese culture, Noble presents us with a profound and very modern reflection on the nature of life.


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Features
Author Denis Noble
Format Softcover
ISBN 9780199228362
Publication Date 14/02/2008
Publisher USA Oxford University Press
Description
The author of this essay, Denis Noble, argues that the gene's view of life, which sees living bodies as mere vehicles for the replication of genetic codes, is not the only way to look at life. He asserts that life is a symphonic interplay between genes, cells, organs, body, and environment, and that the gene's view is only one perspective on this interplay. He introduces readers to the realm of systems biology, a field that has been growing in strength in the past decade, and argues that modern systems biology may be the view we need to adopt to gain a deeper understanding of the nature of life. Drawing on his experiences in his research on the heartbeat, and on evolutionary biology, development, medicine, philosophy, linguistics, and Chinese culture, Noble presents us with a profound and very modern reflection on the nature of life.

The gene's eye view of life, proposed in Richard Dawkins acclaimed bestseller The Selfish Gene, sees living bodies as mere vehicles for the replication of genetic codes. But in The Music of Life, world renowned physiologist Denis Noble argues that, to truly understand life, we must look beyond the "selfish gene" to consider life on a much wider variety of levels. Life, Noble asserts, is a kind of music, a symphonic interplay between genes, cells, organs, body, and environment. He weaves this musical metaphor throughout this personal and deeply lyrical work, illuminating ideas that might otherwise be daunting to non-scientists. In elegant prose, Noble sets out a cutting-edge alternative to the gene's eye view, offering a radical switch of perception in which genes are seen as prisoners and the organism itself is a complex system of many interacting levels. In his more expansive view, life emerges as a process, the ebb and flow of activity in an intricate web of connections. He introduces readers to the realm of systems biology, a field that has been growing in strength in the past decade. Noble, himself one of the founders of this field, argues modern systems biology may be the view we need to adopt to gain a deeper understanding of the nature of life. Drawing on his experiences in his research on the heartbeat, and on evolutionary biology, development, medicine, philosophy, linguistics, and Chinese culture, Noble presents us with a profound and very modern reflection on the nature of life.
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