Dr Nick Lane is a British biochemist and writer. He was awarded the first Provost's Venture Research Prize in the Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment at University College London, where he is now a Reader in Evolutionary Biochemistry. Dr Lane’s research deals with evolutionary biochemistry and bioenergetics, focusing on the origin of life and the evolution of complex cells. Dr Lane was a founding member of the UCL Consortium for Mitochondrial Research, and is leading the UCL Research Frontiers Origins of Life programme. He was awarded the 2011 BMC Research Award for Genetics, Genomics, Bioinformatics and Evolution, and the 2015 Biochemical Society Award for his sustained and diverse contribution to the molecular life sciences and the public understanding of science.
Nick Lane is the author of three acclaimed books on evolutionary biochemistry, which have sold more than 100,000 copies worldwide, and have been translated into 20 languages.
Nick's first book, Oxygen: The Molecule that Made the World (OUP, 2002) is a sweeping history of the relationship between life and our planet, and the paradoxical ways in which adaptations to oxygen play out in our own lives and deaths. It was selected as one of the Sunday Times Books of the Year for 2002.
His second book, Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life (OUP, 2005) is an exploration of the extraordinary effects that mitochondria have had on the evolution of complex life. It was selected as one of The Economist's Books of the Year for 2005, and shortlisted for the 2006 Royal Society Aventis Science Book Prize and the Times Higher Young Academic Author of the Year Award.
Nick's most recent book, Life Ascending: The Ten Great Inventions of Evolution (Profile/Norton 2009) is a celebration of the inventiveness of life, and of our own ability to read the deep past to reconstruct the history of life on earth. The great inventions are: the origin of life, DNA, photosynthesis, the complex cell, sex, movement, sight, hot blood, consciousness and death. Life Ascending won the 2010 Royal Society Prize for Science Books, and was named a Book of the Year by New Scientist, Nature, the Times and the Independent, the latter describing him as “one of the most exciting science writers of our time.”
Nick's next book, due to be published in 2015 by Norton and Profile, is entitled The Vital Question. Why is life the way it is? It will attack a central problem in biology - why did complex life arise only once in four billion years, and why does all complex life share so many peculiar properties, from sex and speciation to senescence?
Nick was also a co-editor of Life in the Frozen State (CRC Press, 2004), the first major text book on cryobiology in the genomic era.
Peer-reviewed articles by Nick Lane have been published in top international journals, including Nature, Science and Cell, and he has published many features in magazines like New Scientist and Scientific American. He has appeared regularly on TV and radio, and speaks in schools and at literary and science festivals. He also worked for several years in the pharmaceutical industry, ultimately as Strategic Director of Medi Cine, a medical multimedia company based in London, where he was responsible for developing interactive approaches to medical education.
Nick is married to Dr Ana Hidalgo-Simon and lives in London with their two young sons, Eneko and Hugo. He spent many years clinging to rock faces in search of fossils and thrills, but his practical interest in palaeontology is rarely rewarded with more than a devil’s toenail. When not climbing, writing or hunting for wild campsites, he can occasionally be found playing the fiddle in London pubs with the Celtic ensemble Probably Not, or exploring Romanesque churches.
Drawing on a grand evolutionary canvas, Oxygen offers fresh perspectives on life and death, explaining modern killer diseases, why we age, and what we can do about it. Advancing revelatory new ideas, following chains of evidence, the book ranges through many disciplines, from environmental sciences to molecular medicine. The result is a captivating vision of contemporary science and a humane synthesis of our place in nature. This remarkable book will redefine the way we think about the world.
發表於2024-11-22
Oxygen 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
路上讀書解讀: 1.先問大傢一個問題:有一樣東西,我們離瞭它活不瞭,如果太多瞭呢就活不成,生命演化要靠它推動,動植物呼吸都離不開它,但是呢,它也能一瞬間引發大火將一切化為灰燼,你猜到它是什麼瞭嗎?沒錯,它就是我們無時無刻不在呼吸的氧氣。 第一,氧氣如何在40億年...
評分路上讀書解讀: 1.先問大傢一個問題:有一樣東西,我們離瞭它活不瞭,如果太多瞭呢就活不成,生命演化要靠它推動,動植物呼吸都離不開它,但是呢,它也能一瞬間引發大火將一切化為灰燼,你猜到它是什麼瞭嗎?沒錯,它就是我們無時無刻不在呼吸的氧氣。 第一,氧氣如何在40億年...
評分路上讀書解讀: 1.先問大傢一個問題:有一樣東西,我們離瞭它活不瞭,如果太多瞭呢就活不成,生命演化要靠它推動,動植物呼吸都離不開它,但是呢,它也能一瞬間引發大火將一切化為灰燼,你猜到它是什麼瞭嗎?沒錯,它就是我們無時無刻不在呼吸的氧氣。 第一,氧氣如何在40億年...
評分路上讀書解讀: 1.先問大傢一個問題:有一樣東西,我們離瞭它活不瞭,如果太多瞭呢就活不成,生命演化要靠它推動,動植物呼吸都離不開它,但是呢,它也能一瞬間引發大火將一切化為灰燼,你猜到它是什麼瞭嗎?沒錯,它就是我們無時無刻不在呼吸的氧氣。 第一,氧氣如何在40億年...
評分路上讀書解讀: 1.先問大傢一個問題:有一樣東西,我們離瞭它活不瞭,如果太多瞭呢就活不成,生命演化要靠它推動,動植物呼吸都離不開它,但是呢,它也能一瞬間引發大火將一切化為灰燼,你猜到它是什麼瞭嗎?沒錯,它就是我們無時無刻不在呼吸的氧氣。 第一,氧氣如何在40億年...
圖書標籤: 科普 生物學 生命科學 生物 科學 NickLane 進化 自然科學相關
主要是關於生物演化,涉及地質氣候、生物化學等許多領域。筆記在goodreads.com
評分看看
評分雖然讀書不多,但毫無疑問,這是我讀過的最好的一本。偉大偉大偉大偉大偉大偉大偉大偉大偉大...
評分閱讀的第三本該作者的書,也是在生化層麵探討生物進化。雖然主題和另兩本書有重閤,但論證的切入角度和證據卻並不完全相同。看得齣雖然本書麵嚮非專業讀者,但作者並沒有一味簡化內容,畢竟有些內容簡化論證過程後完全沒有新意甚至沒有說服力。並且作者在寫這幾本書時,似乎也還在思考和發展自己的觀點。作者在論證時,不斷地自我質問並提齣證據解決這些質問,讓整個推理過程十分精彩。我對手頭該作者的另一本書依然充滿著濃厚的興趣和期待。
評分路上讀書解讀: 不是小廣告,自從有瞭路上讀書,和外國同事討論紐約時報暢銷書,再也不會語塞。吐血推薦。
Oxygen 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載