The Vital Question: Why is life the way it is?

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4.8
19 reviews
Ebook
569
Pages
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About this ebook

Why is life the way it is? Bacteria evolved into complex life just once in four billion years of life on earth-and all complex life shares many strange properties, from sex to ageing and death. If life evolved on other planets, would it be the same or completely different?

In The Vital Question, Nick Lane radically reframes evolutionary history, putting forward a cogent solution to conundrums that have troubled scientists for decades. The answer, he argues, lies in energy: how all life on Earth lives off a voltage with the strength of a bolt of lightning. In unravelling these scientific enigmas, making sense of life's quirks, Lane's explanation provides a solution to life's vital questions: why are we as we are, and why are we here at all?

This is ground-breaking science in an accessible form, in the tradition of Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species, Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene, and Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs and Steel.

Ratings and reviews

4.8
19 reviews
A Google user
January 16, 2017
One of several books by Nick Lane in which he explains to the persevering non-specialist his theories of the central role of mitochondria in the development of complex life, and the sheer unlikeliness of it having arisen at all. Well worth reading.
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Luke
November 14, 2016
A fantastic read by an author who's well acquainted with his subject matter. After Completing the book I rate it "Better than Sex" although it's probably one and the same. Excellent
1 person found this review helpful
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Bo-Jiang Lin
March 21, 2017
Remind me the day-and-night study in college life
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About the author

Nick Lane has published four critically acclaimed books, translated into 20 languages; most recently The Vital Question. He was awarded the 2015 Biochemical Society Award for his outstanding contribution to the molecular life sciences. Life Ascending won the 2010 Royal Society Prize for Science Books.

Nick is a biochemist in the Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment at University College London.

'Like his forebears in that same department - Steve Jones, JBS Haldane - he's that rare species, a scientist who can illuminate the bewildering complexities of biology with clear, luminous words' (Observer)
'One of the most exciting science writers of our time' (Independent)

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