Christian Schwabe
Medical University of South Carolina
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ISBN: 978-1-58706-044-1
Pub Date: August 1, 2001
Pages: 112
Figures: 25
Tables: 1
Print ThisThe Genomic Potential Hypothesis is a biochemist's view of the origin, evolution, and development of life. Large numbers are second nature to a biochemist and though he rarely ever thinks of it explicitly, the concept of mass action is a part of the definition of chemistry. The origin of life, from that perspective, will turn into an event that occurs on the molar scale in units of 1023 and is driven not by needs of biological systems but by mass action, energetics, structure, and kinetics. This approach to evolution entails the total denial of constructive accidents. Mutations are a reality and while most of them are of no consequence or detrimental, one cannot deny that on occasion a beneficial mutation might occur. However, to invoke strings of beneficial mutations that suffice to reshape one animal into the shape of another is not merely unreasonable, it is not science. Evolution will be restricted to the reorganization of nuclear material in line with equilibrium constants and kinetic parameters that govern the quasi two-dimensional chemistry of nucleic acids. The actual evolution occurs at the cellular level and is noted only by the results appearing in the fossil record as small versions of the final form.
Life in a Tenuous Universe
The Frame for New Hypotheses of Evolution
Genomism and the Nature Trail
The Origin of Complexity
Our Young Planet: One is not a Choice
The Condensation of Life
The Origins of Species
Development of Biological Potential
Thoughts on Multi-Cellularity: How Nature got around Darwin
Natura Non Facit Saltum: Nature Does Nothing in Jumps
The Invariance Concept
On the Evolution of Humans
Molecular Geneology
Experiments in Evolution
Quintessence