"Una lectura fascinante que merece estar en todas las bibliotecas científicas." Chemistry World
¿De dónde proviene la vida? ¿Cómo surgió? Estas preguntas cruciales han empezado a obtener revolucionarias respuestas procedentes de ciencias en constante transformación como la bioquímica, la biología molecular o la biofísica.
Pensada tanto para estudiantes de estas disciplinas como para todos los interesados en explorar uno de los misterios más fascinantes de la biología, la vida emergente describe y analiza conceptos y procesos tan fundamentales para explicar el surgimiento de la vida como los de autopoiesis, autoorganización, autorreproducción o emergencia. Gracias a ello es posible explicar que la vida pudo autoproducirse a partir de componentes químicos inertes y cómo la materia inanimada dio pie finalmente a las primeras formas de vida celular. Cuando estas teorías llegan a la fase de experimentación en el laboratorio, para generar formas mínimas de vida, dan lugar a interesantes ideas de carácter filosófico que, certeramente, Pier Luigi Luisi pone al alcance de todos los lectores.
Pier Luigi Luisi estudió en la Scuola Normale Superiore de Pisa. Tras desarrollar su actividad científica en Leningrado y en Eugene (Oregón, Estados Unidos), en 1970 ingresó en el Institut für Polymere de Zúrich. Es autor de decenas de artículos y de numerosos libros dedicados a la biología sintética. En la actualidad dirige varios proyectos de investigación en el departamento de Biología de la Universidad de Roma Tres, relacionados con las proteínas no nacidas y las células mínimas.
This book is a science book and talks about science theory and berates discussion of Intelligent Design as if it is creationism. That said, it also is based on the Beliefs that Origin of Life research was on a pathway to replicate a minimal cell Any day now... the book is from 2006 and in 2024 we're now much farther from that goal rather than nearer. The ideas that even the lipid bilayer of a cell is the Easy part are a farse. The cell biology of 2024 tells us the pores of the cell are extremely complex and work with the cell apparatus to maintain it's integrity and transmit signals to its extracellular neighbor. IMO this book is another relic of poor notions of biology at the time of writing. And new study of virus indicate that non-cellular life must also be consider. Those interested in Origin of Life may want to read this just to gain its historic perspective.
Kinda heavy if your biochemistry it's not that fresh, but it´s really well documented. From the origin of proteins, amino acids, membranes, nucleic acids, organelles and all that tasty stuff that must exist first to create a single cell.
SPOILER ALERT No, it doesn't conclude on how life began, but, it set a lot of conditions and principles that must be present when biological life began.
No one ever knows how life originated. No one ever knows why certain organic compounds are present in living organisms, while some are never found. No one ever knows why life must originate at all. Maybe, we ll never know. But the book clearly sets the platform for a neat argument. It brings out every major theory that exists, and clearly tells us whats missing with each. Its sets forth a good consensus on what each school of thought must do to prove their theory right. Though it reads rather like an academic text, the book has threaded together interesting arguments coherently, providing good schematics and tables wherever and needed, making it easier for any average undergraduate to follow. There may be many books that discuss on the same theme but this one is surely engaging. Whats special is that it proceeds more like an investigation of the problem- with the many theories and facts in hand. I would definitely recommend it to anyone curious about what life is, and how it originated.
The Emergence of Life was pretty technical, but Luisi's writing style lightened it up considerably. I'm not in the field, and the book was still accessable to me. I was suprised to see so little space devoted to nucleic acids. They were not on thier usual pedestal here. Chapter 8 on autopoiesis was very interesting. I'd never heard of this concept before and would like to read more. Overall an enjoyable read.