Sinopsis de AN INTELLIGENT PERSON S GUIDE TO GENETICS
Adrian Woolfson explores the ethical minefield of genetics in the latest book in the popular Intelligent Person''s Guide series; In a laboratory in America, a scientist Craig Ventor having successfully constructed a man-made virus, is now in the process of building the world''s first artificial creature. His work is part of a revolutionary new type of ''synthetic'' biology, which aims not just to understand how living things work, but to build them from scratch. Elsewhere molecular biologists have tapped into the DNA record to show that dodos were in fact a rare type of pigeon and the extinct quagga, a type of zebra. New research has also told us that although a distinct type of human, Neanderthal man was not our ancestor. Like eyewitness accounts of Victorian chimney sweeps, the DNA record is an imperfect time machine that can help reconstruct our past. It will also shape our future, as although designed ''naturally'' by thousands of millions of years of evolution, mankind will soon be able to redesign itself. But how will such work be guided? What is needed is a manifesto for life, which acclaimed author Adrian Woolfson delivers in his examination of life and its future possibilities.
Ficha técnica
Editorial: Duckworth(gerald) & Co.ltd.
ISBN: 9780715633137
Idioma: Inglés
Número de páginas: 240
Encuadernación: Tapa dura
Fecha de lanzamiento: 23/12/2004
Año de edición: 2004
Plaza de edición: London
Especificaciones del producto
Escrito por Adrian Woolfson
Adrian Woolfson es cofundador de Genyro, una empresa de biotecnología especializada en el diseño y la construcción de genomas sintéticos. Estudió Medicina en la Universidad de Oxford y fue investigador en el Darwin College de la Universidad de Cambridge, donde trabajó en el MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology. Como autor ha escrito las obras Without Genes: The History and Future of Genomes y An Intelligent Persons Guide to Genetics. También ha publicado más de 160 artículos científicos, capítulos de libro, reseñas y patentes, y colabora habitualmente en The Wall Street Journal y Science.