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Edited on Sat Jun-04-05 11:23 PM by BurtWorm
Difficult going in stretches for nonscientists, but well worth sticking with.
I am recommending it while still reading it because it's been just a brilliant book for the first 150 (of some 500 pp.). If you haven't heard of it, it's by Richard Dawkins, the British philosopher of science who coined the term "meme" (which doesn't mean what everyone thinks it means). This book is a walk back through time toward the concestor, or common ancestor, of all living beings, told as a sort of Canterbury Tales of evolution, with some 40 rendezvous points of lines of species converging (in the reverse pilgrimage to the dawn of life--in real, forward moving time, of course, the points are where the lines diverged) along the way where various concestors hypothetically stand. The concept is clear and compelling, and the execution is dazzling. You get smarter spending just a little time in the book.
DUers would also enjoy Dawkins' frequent asides about the state of the world today, including several digs at Bush's expense. While ruminating on the notion that things, as improbable as they may be, have to happen only once to have a lasting and profound effect (such as one tree laden with African monkeys crossing to a once much nearer South America to bring the concestors of all New World primates), Dawkins brings up the unpleasant thought that a man who can't even pronounce "nuclear" only has to authorize one offensive nuclear missile strike (improbable as that may seem) to cross a tragic rubicon.
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