Time, Love, Memory

Time, Love, Memory

by JonathanWeiner (Author)

Synopsis

The origin of the species was one of the great unanswered questions. Until Darwin. The origins of the universe and of life itself are fundamental questions still. But perhaps the most intimate, the most immediate, in some ways the most intricate and the most important question for our inquiring species, is the origin of behaviour. How much of our behaviour is passed down from one generation to the next? How much of our fate is decided before we are born? What is written and in what code and of what materials? This is the rich territory of Jonathan Weiner's Time, Love, Memory. In it we are allowed to look over the shoulders of Seymour Benzer at Cal Tech and the other great scientists who are building on their predecessors' work investigating the inheritance of behaviour in a remarkable new way. Nobody until Benzer had ever looked at the actual pieces of DNA that shape behavior and seen how they work. His breakthrough research involves the genes responsible for Time, Love and Memory - and the results of his attempt to draw a map of the genes will have a revolutionary effect on the conditions and the prospects of life itself. Very soon new tools to address anger, depression and mental illness will be at our disposal. And that is only the beginning.

$10.80

Save:$0.83 (7%)

Quantity

Temporarily out of stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: Main
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Published: 02 Oct 2000

ISBN 10: 0571201113
ISBN 13: 9780571201112
Book Overview: Time, Love, Memory by Jonathan Weiner explores the cutting-edge science around the most intimate and immediate question facing our inquiring species: what is the genetic origin of behaviour? How much of our fate is decided before we are born?

Media Reviews
Fascinating.... [A] compelling account of the origins of a scientific revolution [and] a poignant sketch of the scientist-as-artist. -- Newsday
Weiner shines his formidable science-reporting light indoors....There is no better fly on the wall. -- The Philadelphia Inquirer