The

Beginning with a new essay, "Levels of Life and Death," Tibor Gánti develops three general arguments about the nature of life. In "The Nature of the Living State," Professor Gánti answers Francis Crick's puzzles about "life itself," offering a set of reflections on...

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Tác giả chính: Gánti, Tibor
Tác giả khác: Tibor Gánti with commentary by James Griesemer and Eors Szathmáry
Ngôn ngữ:Undetermined
English
Được phát hành: Oxford,New York Oxford University Press 2003
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Thư viện lưu trữ: Trung tâm Học liệu Trường Đại học Trà Vinh
LEADER 01559nam a2200277Ia 4500
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020 |a 0198507267 
020 |a 9780198507260 
041 |a eng 
082 |a 576.83 
082 |b T552 
100 |a Gánti, Tibor 
245 4 |a The  
245 0 |c Tibor Gánti with commentary by James Griesemer and Eors Szathmáry 
260 |a Oxford,New York 
260 |b Oxford University Press 
260 |c 2003 
300 |a 201 p. 
300 |b ill. 
300 |c 27 cm 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references (p.194-201) 
520 |a Beginning with a new essay, "Levels of Life and Death," Tibor Gánti develops three general arguments about the nature of life. In "The Nature of the Living State," Professor Gánti answers Francis Crick's puzzles about "life itself," offering a set of reflections on the parameters of the problems to be solved in origins of life research and, more broadly, in the search for principles governing the living state in general. "The Principle of Life" describes in accessible language Gánti's chief insight about the organization of living systems-his theory of the "chemoton," or chemical automaton. The simplest chemoton model of the living state consists of three chemically coupled subsystems: an autocatalytic metabolism, a genetic molecule and a membrane 
650 |a Life (Biology); Biochemistry 
700 |a Tibor Gánti with commentary by James Griesemer and Eors Szathmáry 
980 |a Trung tâm Học liệu Trường Đại học Trà Vinh