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    THE RAINBOW AND THE WORM
    The Physics of Organisms(3rd Edition)

    by Mae-Wan Ho (Institute of Science in Society, UK)

    Table of Contents (72k)
    Preface (107k)
    Chapter 1: What is It to Be Alive? (200k)
    Chapter 2: Do Organisms Contravenethe Second Law? (137k)
    Chapter 3: Can the Second Law Copewith Organised Complexity? (342k)
    Chapter 4: Energy Flow and Living Cycles (448k)

    Mae-Wan Ho, B.Sc. (First Class) and Ph.D. Biochemistry, Hong Kong University, embarked on a distinguished academic career that included Postdoctoral Fellow in Neurosciences, University of California at San Diego; Fellow of the National Genetics Foundation, USA; Senior Research Fellow, University of London; and Lecturer in Genetics and then Reader in Biology, Open University, UK. Her research evolved through biochemistry, molecular genetics and non-Darwinian evolution to the physics of organisms — a new discipline defined in the present book, first published in 1993 and the 2nd edition in 1998 – and is widely acclaimed by serious scientists and non-scientists alike. Her other books include Bioelectrodynamics and Biocommunication (1994), Bioenergetics (1995), Genetic Engineering: Dream or Nightmare? (1998, 1999, reprint with extended introduction in 2007), Living with the Fluid Genome (2003), Energy and Information Transfer in Biological Systems (2003), Unravelling AIDS (2005), Which Energy? (2006), Food Futures Now, Organic, Sustainable, Fossil Fuel Free (2008). Mae-Wan Ho now lives in London with her husband, and is Director and co-founder of the Institute of Science in Society (www.i-sis.org.uk) and Editor of Science in Society.


    This highly unusual book began as a serious inquiry into Schrödinger's question, “What is life?”, and as a celebration of life itself. It takes the reader on a voyage of discovery through many areas of contemporary physics, from non-equilibrium thermodynamics and quantum optics to liquid crystals and fractals, all necessary for illuminating the problem of life. In the process, the reader is treated to a rare and exquisite view of the organism, gaining novel insights not only into the physics, but also into “the poetry and meaning of being alive.”

    This much-enlarged third edition includes new findings on the central role of biological water in organizing living processes; it also completes the author's novel theory of the organism and its applications in ecology, physiology and brain science.

     
    Contents:
    • What Is It to Be Alive?
    • Do Organisms Contravene the Second Law?
    • Can the Second Law Cope with Organized Complexity?
    • Energy Flow and Living Cycles
    • How to Catch a Falling Electron
    • Towards a Thermodynamics of Organised Complexity
    • Sustainable Systems as Organisms
    • The Seventy-Three Octaves of Nature's Music
    • Coherent Excitations of the Body Electric
    • The Solid-State Cell
    • 'Life is a Little Electric Current'
    • How Coherent Is the Organism? The Heartbeat of Health
    • How Coherent Is the Organism? Sensitivity to Weak Electromagnetic Fields
    • Life is All the Colors of the Rainbow in a Worm
    • The Liquid Crystalline Organism
    • Crystal Consciousness
    • Liquid Crystalline Water
    • Quantum Entanglement and Coherence
    • Ignorance of the External Observer
    • Time and Freewill
     
    Readership: Sixth-form and undergraduate students in physics and biology; biophysics, biochemistry and quantum mechanics undergraduates.
     
    “… ‘what is life?’ Mae-Wan Ho presents an interconnected system of proposals, experimental results and conjectures which go a long way towards providing an entirely new answer to this question. It is based on research which is mainstream in its theoretical physical foundations, though innovatory in some of its techniques. This makes the book highly important, and if she is right it would be revolutionary.”
    Network
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “Mae-Wan Ho's book provides a very original survey of how biology may be linked to physics through the concepts of coherence and of coupled processes. Although it is deeply serious, the writing has a pleasant touch of gaiety, due, I think, to the author's sense of excitement in the central problem: What constitutes 'being alive'?”
    K G Denbigh
    Professor of Physical Chemistry
    Queen Elizabeth College, London
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “The layman may not understand half of this book, but he will understand more than he expects to or may feel he has any right to. The author, whether discussing ‘quantum-entanglement’ or ‘energy-flow’, ‘dynamic order’ or life as ‘collective response to weak signals’, has the gift of making the reader dream.”
    P N Furbank
    Emeritus Professor of English
    Open University
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “The book is recommended to all scientists who are interested in understanding life. It shows that life is more than a complex chemical reaction and, written by an author who understands life not only through the narrow tube of our ratio, that life is worth living with loving care. The book can be easily understood, because it is written in such a way that the basic scientific terms are repeated step by step before they are used for discussing the essential questions. Fifty years after Schrödinger's “What is Life?”, this book is a worthy instalment, since it intensifies the original matter of Schrödinger.”
    Fritz-Albert Popp
    International Institute of Biophysics, Kaiserslautern, Germany
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “… an excellent introduction to the more physically motivated approaches to understanding biological complexity. And there's not a gel in sight.”
    Douglas B Kell
    Trends in Biomedical Sciences
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “It is high time a good book was available to not only teach biologists some physics, particularly bioenergetics, but make them sit up and think a bit more deeply about it. This little volume is more readable than other drier and much weightier books on the subject. Herein lies perhaps the merit of Mae-Wan Ho's book.”
    Cell Biology International
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “The book is an expression of Mae-Wan Ho's belief that science is ‘an adventure of the free, enquiring spirit which thrives not so much on answers as [on] unanswered questions’. The book is the coming together of many highly exciting ideas of contemporary physics in what appears to be a collage — but one that draws on a range of experiment and theory, and illuminates Ho's definition of life as a ‘process of being an organizing whole’.”
    American Scientist
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “… a fascinating excursion towards and beyond the limits of physical science fifty years on from Schrödinger's classic.”
    David Lloyd
    Binary — Computing in Microbiology
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “… [the author] clearly understands the “whys” of the world at a depth and breadth which no one else approaches … clinical medicine requires this kind of insight …”
    Walter Bortz, MD
    author of Dare to be 100
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “… a truly stimulating and beautifully written book, full of new perspectives and researchable ideas.”
    Ervin Laszlo
    author of The Whispering Pond
     
    Review of the 1st Edition: “… a remarkably eclectic work, joyously written and a joy to read. I certainly learned a lot from it.”
    Geoffrey Sewell
    author of Quantum Physics of Collective Phenomena
     
    408pp    Pub. date: Aug 2008  
    ISBN:   978-981-283-259-7
    981-283-259-9
       US$58 / £32

     


    408pp    Pub. date: Aug 2008  
    ISBN:   978-981-283-260-3(pbk)
    981-283-260-2(pbk)
       US$34 / £18

     


     

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    Updated on 13 February 2012