The Origin and Evolution of Life opens a window into how energy and matter shape living form.
This edition surveys the action, reaction, and interaction of energy across anatomy, development, and heredity to explain why vertebrates and other life have changed the way they have. It frames evolution as a set of laws governing form, function, and adaptation that connect visible structures with invisible chromatin changes.
From the movement of energy in plants and animals to the chromatin that carries ancestral instructions, the text links physical forces with the slow, steady emergence of new traits. It presents a coherent view of how form and function evolve together, under pressure from environment, reproduction, and development.
- How actions and reactions at the cellular level influence organismal form and movement
- The role of chromatin as a conservative yet progressive driver of evolution
- Core ideas about adaptation, heredity, and the law of ancestral repetition
- Connections between fossil records, comparative anatomy, and modern biology
Ideal for readers seeking a thoughtful, research-grounded account of evolution and life’s energy-driven dynamics.