Kinetic Theory of Living Pattern (Developmental and Cell Biology Series, Series Number 28)
معرفی کتاب «Kinetic Theory of Living Pattern (Developmental and Cell Biology Series, Series Number 28)» نوشتهٔ Lionel G Harrison; Cambridge University Press، منتشرشده توسط نشر Cambridge University Press 2005-09-15 در سال 2005. این کتاب در فرمت djvu، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
This book contains both an extensive philosophical commentary on this dichotomy in views and an exposition of the type of theory most favored by physical scientists. In this theory, living form is a manifestation of the dynamics of chemical change and physical transport or other physics of spatial communication. The Reaction-diffusion theory as initiated by Turing in 1952 and elaborated by Prigogine, Gierer, Meinhardt, and others is discussed in detail. In some respects the book takes up the theme that "the things we see in the cell are less important than the actions we recognize in the cell", which was a major theme of D'Arcy W. Thompson's classic 1917 work On Growth and Form. Development of the shapes of living organisms and their parts is a field of science in which there are no generally accepted theoretical principles. What form these principles are likely to take, when they emerge, is a subject in which there is a wide gulf of disagreement between physical scientists and experimental biologists. This book contains both an extensive philosophical commentary on this dichotomy in views and an exposition of the type of theory most favoured by physical scientists. In this theory living form is a manifestation of the dynamics of chemical change and physical transport or other physics of spatial communication. The reaction-diffusion theory, as initiated by Turing in 1952 and since elaborated by Prigogine and by Gierer and Meinhardt among others, is discussed in detail at a level that requires a good knowledge of a first course in calculus, but no more than that
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discusses The Development Of The Shapes Of Living Organisms And Their Parts In A Field Of Science In Which There Are No Generally Accepted Theoretical Principles.
D'Arcy Thompson (1917) wrote that "the things which we see in the cell are less important than the actions which we recognize in the cell."