Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. "From the Dust of the Ground"
2. Spontaneous Generation--Ups and Downs
3. The Revival of the Belief in Spontaneous Generation
4. Louis Pasteur--the Deathblow to Spontaneous Generation
5. Between Pasteur and Darwin--A Dead End
6. The Oparin-Haldane Hypothesis
7. An Era of Optimism
8. Evolution in a Test Tube
9. Manfred Eigen's Model
10. Crisis--Real or Fictitious?
11. The RNA World--A Case for Renewed Optimism?
12. And Yet, Metabolism
13. The Emergence of Life--Neither By Chance Nor By Design
14. "Life on Mars? So What?"
Bibliography
Index
IRIS FRY teaches at the Cohn Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Ideas, Tel Aviv University, and in the department of humanities and arts at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa. Her book The Origin of Life: Mystery or Scientific Problem? was published in Israel in 1997.
The Emergence of Life on Earth...is...a work of history and
philosophy of science, raising important questions in a way fully
up to date with current discourse in both history and philosophy,
and integrating these approaches throughout the
book....Regarding the different modern hypotheses on the
emergence of life, Fry repeats the argument of her earlier paper
that these are not as different as they seem, because they contain
deep philosophical elements in common with those areas that
historically formed the basis of greatest discord, especially what
she calls the continuity thesis.
*Journal of the History of Biology*
Fry offers a unique tapestry of history, philosophy, and science as
applied to the question of life's origins and the related issues
attendant to the evolution/creationism debate. Early chapters
provide a valuable historical framework for more detailed
elaboration in later chapters of recent theories and
investigations....Fry's treatment is thorough, objective, and
uncompromising. Her views are clearly stated, but in a way that
encourages readers to think and formulate personal opinions. After
reading this book, many will agree with the author's assertion that
appreciation for the complexity of questions attendant to the
emergence of life enigma is most complete when the views of
scientists, historians, and philosophers are all considered.
*Choice*
The Emergence of Life on Earth is...methodical,
comprehensive....[Fry] allows the intrinsic fascination of the
science to speak for itself. This low-key approach turns out to be
a real treat in our overhyped, oversold, overly solicitous
world. Her book rewards by giving you a generous return on your
investment of time and effort; the pleasure comes form learning,
not from entertainment.
*Cell*
Essential reading for people in disciplines ranging from philosophy
to biology. It is simply the best general book that I know on the
question of the origin of life.
*author of Mystery of Mysteries: Is Evolution a Social
Construction?*
Fry has fashioned a masterful account of the history, philosophy,
and science of the origin of life and the possibility of
extraterrestrial life. Her story weaves profound Western ideas of
who we are and where we came from, from Aristotle to Gould, from
Kant to NASA.
*University of Washington*
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