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The Selfish Gene
Book

The Selfish Gene

Oxford UP, 1990
First Edition: 1976 Mehr

automatisch generiertes Audio
automatisch generiertes Audio

Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

This is an excellent book, thought provoking, lucidly written and full of ideas that seem fresh and new even three decades after first publication. Richard Dawkins is a preeminent writer on science and this was the first of his impressive, award-winning books on various scientific and philosophical subjects. Here and there, the book, which covers evolution, heredity, man’s place among living creatures and many other subjects as well, shows its age. For example, Dawkins refers to transistors in his discussion of computers, wonders whether a computer will ever be able to win a chess match against a grand master and seems to think that understanding the gene sequence is an almost impossibly distant dream. But the book’s underlying logic and its big ideas have nothing antiquated or obsolete about them. getAbstract highly recommends it to the intellectually curious.

Take-Aways

  • Nature seeks stability – not consciously, of course – and genes are no exception.
  • The guiding principle of evolution is "survival of the stable," not the fittest.
  • The ancestors of genes were "replicator" molecules that evolved when the earth was a soupy chemical sea, and learned to copy themselves. Replicators became DNA.

About the Author

Richard Dawkins is the first holder of Oxford University’s newly-endowed Charles Simoni Professorship of Public Understanding of Science. He has written many bestselling books, including Climbing Mount Improbable, and has won many literary awards.


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