Contents

Preface

1 Trial and Error
        The dawn of science
        The Middle Ages
        Revival of learning
        Empirical science emerges

2 Revolutions and Revolutionaries
        Early astronomy
        The Copernican revolution
        The Newtonian revolution

3 Time and Tide
        The Christian era
        The fossil enigma
        Cosmic evolution
        Geology comes of age
        A new perspective

4 Fauna and Flora
        Biology before the scientific revolution
        Biology of the scientific revolution
        Evolution

5 Parents and Offspring
        Hereditary mechanisms
        Population genetics
        Neo-Darwinism

6 Nuts and Bolts
        Deoxyribonucleic acid
        Gene expression
        Proteins
        Evolution: the modern synthesis

7 Chance and Necessity
        The improbability of biological macromolecules
        Current theories of protein evolution
        Failings of current theories
        The evolution of macromolecules

8 Chance and Complexity
        DNA replication
        Transcription
        Biosynthetic pathways
        Biological machines
        Complexity

9 Variation and Variability
        Adaptation and speciation
        Evolution is a multi-step process
        Evolution within limits

10 Gaps and Gradations
        The missing records
        Patterns in the fossil record
        Explaining the facts

11 New Wine and Old Wineskins
        Morphogenesis
        Quantum biology

12 Homology and Phylogeny
        Recapitulation
        Cladistics

13 Chicken and Egg
        Primitive macromolecules
        The genetic code
        Early enzymes
        Eukaryotes from prokaryotes

14 Sense and Sensibility
        The scientific method
        The paradigm of evolution
        A view from outside the paradigm

15 Pride and Prejudice
        The modern scientific world-view
        Design
        Objections to design

Appendix 1: Stratigraphical column

Appendix 2: Classification of animals

References

Index

© Leighton Academic Press, 2002