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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andreas Losch (Universität Bern, Switzerland)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 18.00cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.830kg ISBN: 9781107175891ISBN 10: 1107175895 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 13 July 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction Andreas Losch; 1. Reflections on origins, life, and the origins of life Marie-Christine Maurel; 2. The search for another Earth-like planet and life elsewhere Joshua Krissansen-Totton and David C. Catling; 3. The shape of life: morphological signatures of ancient microbial life in rocks Beda A. Hofmann; 4. Precellular evolution and the origin of life: some notes on reductionism, complexity and historical contingency Antonio Lazcano; 5. Science and philosophy faced with the question of life in the twenty-first century Michel Morange; 6. What is life? And why is the question still open? Claus Beisbart; 7. Is the origin of life a fluke? Why the chance hypothesis should not be dismissed too quickly Christian Weidemann; 8. Some contemporary – and persistent – fallacies and confusions about astrobiology Milan M. Ćirković; 9. Superintelligent AI and the postbiological cosmos approach Susan Schneider; 10. What theology can contribute to the question 'what is life?' Andreas Losch; 11. Autopoietic systems and the theology of creation: on the nature of life Alexander Maßmann; 12. Where there's life there's intelligence Ted Peters; 13. Life in the universe, incarnation and salvation Juan Pablo Marrufo del Torro, SJ; 14. Talking lions, intelligent aliens and knowing God – some epistemological reflections on a speculative issue Taede A. Smedes; 15. What is life? On Earth and beyond: conclusion Andreas Losch; 16. A skeptical afterword Antonio Lazcano.Reviews'All the contributions are well written and extensively referenced. They fit together well and give the impression of careful editing. At the end, do we really know what Life is? In his Introduction, the editor quotes the NASA working definition, 'life is a self-sustained chemical system capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution', and in his excellent Conclusion writes that the evolution of the special relation of its constituents might be the key to understand it. If we did find traces of life beyond Earth, we might learn more about the beginnings of its evolution here.' Peredur Williams, The Observatory: A Review of Astronomy 'The book is a stimulating read for an open-minded interdisciplinary audience that is eager to learn more about very different concepts of life - binary or not so much so - and intelligence. ... The contributors to this volume succeed magnificently in an effort of vulgarisation of their highly specified research areas and the editor succeeds splendidly in not only juxtaposing these contributions but providing a frame that allows for an exchange of ideas, where not the one truth is held valid over all others but where syntheses may emerge and where a progress in knowledge and understanding develops step-by-step. Even though the reader may not be inclined to follow each and every line of argument, the political context of scientific developments, and their philosophical foundations are highlighted and the red thread of the initial question 'what is life?' surely lead to an individual gain of insights for every reader.' Ulrike Bohlmann, German Journal of Air and Space Law 'All the contributions are well written and extensively referenced. They fit together well and give the impression of careful editing. At the end, do we really know what Life is? In his Introduction, the editor quotes the NASA working definition, 'life is a self-sustained chemical system capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution', and in his excellent Conclusion writes that the evolution of the special relation of its constituents might be the key to understand it. If we did find traces of life beyond Earth, we might learn more about the beginnings of its evolution here.' Peredur Williams, The Observatory: A Review of Astronomy 'The book is a stimulating read for an open-minded interdisciplinary audience that is eager to learn more about very different concepts of life - binary or not so much so - and intelligence. ... The contributors to this volume succeed magnificently in an effort of vulgarisation of their highly specified research areas and the editor succeeds splendidly in not only juxtaposing these contributions but providing a frame that allows for an exchange of ideas, where not the one truth is held valid over all others but where syntheses may emerge and where a progress in knowledge and understanding develops step-by-step. Even though the reader may not be inclined to follow each and every line of argument, the political context of scientific developments, and their philosophical foundations are highlighted and the red thread of the initial question `what is life?' surely lead to an individual gain of insights for every reader.' Ulrike Bohlmann, German Journal of Air and Space Law 'All the contributions are well written and extensively referenced. They fit together well and give the impression of careful editing. At the end, do we really know what Life is? In his Introduction, the editor quotes the NASA working definition, 'life is a self-sustained chemical system capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution', and in his excellent Conclusion writes that the evolution of the special relation of its constituents might be the key to understand it. If we did find traces of life beyond Earth, we might learn more about the beginnings of its evolution here.' Peredur Williams, The Observatory: A Review of Astronomy 'The book is a stimulating read for an open-minded interdisciplinary audience that is eager to learn more about very different concepts of life - binary or not so much so - and intelligence. ... The contributors to this volume succeed magnificently in an effort of vulgarisation of their highly specified research areas and the editor succeeds splendidly in not only juxtaposing these contributions but providing a frame that allows for an exchange of ideas, where not the one truth is held valid over all others but where syntheses may emerge and where a progress in knowledge and understanding develops step-by-step. Even though the reader may not be inclined to follow each and every line of argument, the political context of scientific developments, and their philosophical foundations are highlighted and the red thread of the initial question 'what is life?' surely lead to an individual gain of insights for every reader.' Ulrike Bohlmann, German Journal of Air and Space Law 'All the contributions are well written and extensively referenced. They fit together well and give the impression of careful editing. At the end, do we really know what Life is? In his Introduction, the editor quotes the NASA working definition, 'life is a self-sustained chemical system capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution', and in his excellent Conclusion writes that the evolution of the special relation of its constituents might be the key to understand it. If we did find traces of life beyond Earth, we might learn more about the beginnings of its evolution here.' Peredur Williams, The Observatory: A Review of Astronomy 'The book is a stimulating read for an open-minded interdisciplinary audience that is eager to learn more about very different concepts of life - binary or not so much so - and intelligence. ... The contributors to this volume succeed magnificently in an effort of vulgarisation of their highly specified research areas and the editor succeeds splendidly in not only juxtaposing these contributions but providing a frame that allows for an exchange of ideas, where not the one truth is held valid over all others but where syntheses may emerge and where a progress in knowledge and understanding develops step-by-step. Even though the reader may not be inclined to follow each and every line of argument, the political context of scientific developments, and their philosophical foundations are highlighted and the red thread of the initial question 'what is life?' surely lead to an individual gain of insights for every reader.' Ulrike Bohlmann, German Journal of Air and Space Law 'All the contributions are well written and extensively referenced. They fit together well and give the impression of careful editing. At the end, do we really know what Life is? In his Introduction, the editor quotes the NASA working definition, 'life is a self-sustained chemical system capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution', and in his excellent Conclusion writes that the evolution of the special relation of its constituents might be the key to understand it. If we did find traces of life beyond Earth, we might learn more about the beginnings of its evolution here.' Peredur Williams, The Observatory: A Review of Astronomy 'The book is a stimulating read for an open-minded interdisciplinary audience that is eager to learn more about very different concepts of life - binary or not so much so - and intelligence. ... The contributors to this volume succeed magnificently in an effort of vulgarisation of their highly specified research areas and the editor succeeds splendidly in not only juxtaposing these contributions but providing a frame that allows for an exchange of ideas, where not the one truth is held valid over all others but where syntheses may emerge and where a progress in knowledge and understanding develops step-by-step. Even though the reader may not be inclined to follow each and every line of argument, the political context of scientific developments, and their philosophical foundations are highlighted and the red thread of the initial question 'what is life?' surely lead to an individual gain of insights for every reader.' Ulrike Bohlmann, German Journal of Air and Space Law Author InformationAndreas Losch is an award-winning theologian, specialising in the dialog between the sciences, philosophy and theology, and he is currently coordinating the project 'Life beyond our planet?' at the Center for Space and Habitability, Universität Bern, Switzerland. Losch is a member of the Center of Theological Inquiry, Princeton, New Jersey and he serves in the councils of the European Society for the Study of Science and Theology and in the Karl Heim Society. He is also editor-in-chief of a German forum for dialog between the sciences and theology. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |