
The History Of Life Is A Nearly Four Billion Year Old Story Of Transformative Change. This Change Ranges From Dramatic Macroscopic Innovations Such As The Evolution Of Wings Or Eyes, To A Myriad Of Molecular Changes That Form The Basis Of Macroscopic Innovations. We Are Familiar With Many Examples Of Innovations (qualitatively New Phenotypes That Provide A Critical Benefit) But Have No Systematic Understanding Of The Principles That Allow Organisms To Innovate. This Book Proposes Several Such Principles As The Basis Of A Theory Of Innovation, Integrating Recent Knowledge About Complex Molecular Phenotypes With More Traditional Darwinian Thinking. Central To The Book Are Genotype Networks: Vast Sets Of Connected Genotypes That Exist In Metabolism And Regulatory Circuitry, As Well As In Protein And Rna Molecules. The Theory Can Successfully Unify Innovations That Occur At Different Levels Of Organization. It Captures Known Features Of Biological Innovation, Including The Fact That Many Innovations Occur Multiple Times Independently, And That They Combine Existing Parts Of A System To New Purposes. It Also Argues That Environmental Change Is Important To Create Biological Systems That Are Both Complex And Robust, And Shows How Such Robustness Can Facilitate Innovation. Beyond That, The Theory Can Reconcile Neutralism And Selectionism, As Well As Explain The Role Of Phenotypic Plasticity, Gene Duplication, Recombination, And Cryptic Variation In Innovation. Finally, Its Principles Can Be Applied To Technological Innovation, And Thus Open To Human Engineering Endeavours The Powerful Principles That Have Allowed Life's Spectacular Success.
This book investigates the fundamental principles that enable organisms to produce qualitatively new phenotypes, proposing a systematic theory of biological innovation. Andreas Wagner, a professor of evolutionary biology, synthesizes recent molecular data with classical Darwinian frameworks to explain how life evolves. By focusing on the architecture of genotype networks, the author argues that specific organizational principles allow for the emergence of complex, robust, and innovative biological systems.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the field of systems biology, noting its ability to bridge the gap between molecular-level data and macro-evolutionary theory. Readers frequently observe that the prose is academically rigorous and requires a foundational understanding of genetics and evolutionary concepts to fully grasp the proposed theoretical framework.
Page Count:
264
Publication Date:
2011-01-01
ISBN-10:
0191621862
ISBN-13:
9780191621864
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