Image for Darwin's black box  : the biochemical challenge to evolution

Darwin's black box : the biochemical challenge to evolution ([New ed.])

See all formats and editions

Ten years ago, "Darwin's Black Box" launched the Intelligent Design movement: the argument that nature exhibits evidence of design, beyond Darwinian randomness.

Today, the movement is stronger than ever, and the book is a classic and an international bestseller.

At last, Michael Behe has updated the book with a major new afterword on the state of the debate.

The Intelligent Design movement was born when a handful of scientists realized that nature exhibits characteristics that could not have evolved by random mutation.

Prominent among them was Michael Behe, a microbiologist working in a field that Darwin could not even have imagined existing.

Microbiology has discovered staggering complexity at the cellular level of life and during his research Behe made a stunning discovery: some parts of life are irreducibly complex.

They cannot function without all of their parts. Yet, step-by-step genetic mutations would never produce all of those parts together at once.

Some parts of the biological world must have been designed. From one end of the spectrum to the other, "Darwin's Black Box" has established itself as the key text in the intelligent design movement, the one argument that must be addressed in order to determine whether Darwinian evolution is sufficient to explain life as we know it, or not.

Read More
Available
£18.99
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
The Free Press
0743290313 / 9780743290319
Paperback / softback
576.82
19/06/2006
United States
English
xii, 329 p. : ill.
22 cm
general Learn More
Previous ed.: New York: Free, 1996.