A challenger of the orthodox "neo-Darwinist" interpretation of evolution,
microbiologist Margulis has made her professional mark touting an
alternative: symbiogenesis. She and coauthor (and son) Sagan have
presented their ideas in earlier popular works (What Is Life?, 1995),
but never as vigorously as in this volume. Essentially, the debate
between neo-Darwinists and Margulis hinges on the definition of
a species, and the manner in which a new one appears. To Margulis
and Sagan, the neo-Darwinist model, which asserts random gene mutation
as the source of inherited variations, is "wildly overemphasized,"
and to support their view, they delve deeply into the world of microbes.
They detail the anatomy of cells with and without nuclei, positing
a process of genome ingestion that creates a new species. Surprisingly,
the upshot of Margulis' theories is the rehabilitation of Jean Baptiste
de Lamarck, whose theory that supposedly acquired traits are hereditary
has been ridiculed for 150 years. Polemical and provocative, Margulis
and Sagan's work should set many to thinking that evolution has
not yet been completely figured out.
%0 Book
%1 margulis02
%A Margulis, Lynn
%A Sagan, Dorion
%C Toronto
%D 2002
%I HarperCollins
%K biology evolution
%P 1--240
%T Acquiring Genomes: A Theory of the Origins of Species
%U http://www.amazon.ca/Acquiring-Genomes-Theory-Origins-Species/dp/0465043925/sr=1-2/qid=1157471537/ref=sr_1_2/702-0885532-1303250?ie=UTF8&s=books
%X A challenger of the orthodox "neo-Darwinist" interpretation of evolution,
microbiologist Margulis has made her professional mark touting an
alternative: symbiogenesis. She and coauthor (and son) Sagan have
presented their ideas in earlier popular works (What Is Life?, 1995),
but never as vigorously as in this volume. Essentially, the debate
between neo-Darwinists and Margulis hinges on the definition of
a species, and the manner in which a new one appears. To Margulis
and Sagan, the neo-Darwinist model, which asserts random gene mutation
as the source of inherited variations, is "wildly overemphasized,"
and to support their view, they delve deeply into the world of microbes.
They detail the anatomy of cells with and without nuclei, positing
a process of genome ingestion that creates a new species. Surprisingly,
the upshot of Margulis' theories is the rehabilitation of Jean Baptiste
de Lamarck, whose theory that supposedly acquired traits are hereditary
has been ridiculed for 150 years. Polemical and provocative, Margulis
and Sagan's work should set many to thinking that evolution has
not yet been completely figured out.
@book{margulis02,
abstract = {A challenger of the orthodox "neo-Darwinist" interpretation of evolution,
microbiologist Margulis has made her professional mark touting an
alternative: symbiogenesis. She and coauthor (and son) Sagan have
presented their ideas in earlier popular works (What Is Life?, 1995),
but never as vigorously as in this volume. Essentially, the debate
between neo-Darwinists and Margulis hinges on the definition of
a species, and the manner in which a new one appears. To Margulis
and Sagan, the neo-Darwinist model, which asserts random gene mutation
as the source of inherited variations, is "wildly overemphasized,"
and to support their view, they delve deeply into the world of microbes.
They detail the anatomy of cells with and without nuclei, positing
a process of genome ingestion that creates a new species. Surprisingly,
the upshot of Margulis' theories is the rehabilitation of Jean Baptiste
de Lamarck, whose theory that supposedly acquired traits are hereditary
has been ridiculed for 150 years. Polemical and provocative, Margulis
and Sagan's work should set many to thinking that evolution has
not yet been completely figured out.},
added-at = {2006-09-18T06:26:07.000+0200},
address = {Toronto},
author = {Margulis, Lynn and Sagan, Dorion},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/22167e79185dce536b1feb4cd81e08d52/neilernst},
citeulike-article-id = {828966},
comment = {- posits the symbiogenesis theory of species formation},
description = {Not previously uploaded},
interhash = {dd1ae1c8d7fba7e853a0701ccf43b662},
intrahash = {2167e79185dce536b1feb4cd81e08d52},
keywords = {biology evolution},
month = {January},
pages = {1--240},
priority = {2},
publisher = {HarperCollins},
timestamp = {2006-09-18T06:26:07.000+0200},
title = {Acquiring Genomes: A Theory of the Origins of Species},
url = {http://www.amazon.ca/Acquiring-Genomes-Theory-Origins-Species/dp/0465043925/sr=1-2/qid=1157471537/ref=sr_1_2/702-0885532-1303250?ie=UTF8\&s=books},
year = 2002
}