Technological Innovations & Transferance, Biology - Biotechnology, Biotechnology & Bioengineering, Physical Anthropology, Evolution
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Overview
"What if everything changed and nobody noticed?" Walter Truett Anderson muses in this energetic, intelligent, and strikingly original book, examining the convergence of the biosciences with electronic technologies and the evolutionary impact these developments will have on human life and society. Anderson's task, he maintains, is to convince us that this "bionic convergence" is already happening to us and the world we inhabit. In revealing the capacity of genetic research, environmental management, industrial processes, and information resources that will augment human life, Anderson asks us to consider the questions of ethics and equity that undoubtedly accompany this transition. As new resources emerge, how will we distribute them equally? And what new structures, skills, and values must we develop in order to thrive amidst a staggering range of options? Evolution Isn't What It Used to Be is a thought-provoking lens focused on our technology-driven world: where we are and where we may be going. Anderson's questions about the future of human life are sharp and provocative, and the answers, he points out, are up to us - as individuals and as a society.Editorials
Booknews
A dozen papers from a 1991 symposium at the University of Michigan investigate the natural and artificial airborne particles that impact the health of humans, focusing on the ecology and distribution and the health effects. The keynote address warns of the health risk of research in aerobiology. Pollen, microbes in wastewater and domestic waste, domestic dust mites in Arizona, conifer pollen, and allergens and asthma in the workplace are among the other topics. For clinicians and researchers. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)Book Details
Published
April 22, 1996
Publisher
New York : W.H. Freeman, c1996.
Pages
192
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780716729983