Volume 3, Number 10 · December 31, 1964

The Age of Biology

By Stephen Toulmin
New Patterns in Genetics and Development
by C.H. Waddington

Columbia, 271 pp., $10.00

The Nature of Life
by C.H. Waddington

Altheneum, 136 pp., $4.00

The Life of the Cell: Its Nature, Origin and Basic Development
by J.A.V. Butler

Basic Books, 167 pp., $4.50

The Biochemical Approach to Life
by F.R. Jevons

Basic Books, 184 pp., $4.50

Genetics and Man
by C.D. Darlington

Macmillan, 165 pp., $7.50

Heredity and the Nature of Man
by Theodosius Dobzhansky

Harcourt, Brace & World, 165 pp., $4.75

These days, DNA and RNA are news. The fame of these 'nucleic acids'—so significant for contemporary genetics—is a curious fact, and one that takes some explaining; but it should not (I believe) be considered in isolation. For, if we look back over the last ten or fifteen years, we can see that it is only one aspect of a more widespread change, which in different ways affects the whole style of contemporary life and thought. To be deliberately sweeping: if the dominant sciences (and sources of influence) during the first half of the twentieth century were mathematical and physical ones, the second half of the century (by contrast) looks like being a biological age.



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