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Titre : | Evolution : Possible or Impossible ? : Molecular Biology and the Laws of Chance in Nontechnical Language |
Auteurs : | James F. Coppedge, Auteur |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | Grand Rapids [USA] : Zondervan Publishing House, 1973 |
Collection : | Contemporary Evangelical Perspectives (CEP) |
Format : | 276 p. / index |
Note générale : | A new approach to the subject, based on exciting recent discoveries involving proteins and DNA, the "golden molecule" of heredity. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Index. décimale : | MI/E (Théorie de l'évolution, Darwin : défense et critique) |
Résumé : |
Research analyst James F. Coppedge presents a new approach to the study of evolution.
Says Dr. Coppedge: “There have recently come to pass certain spectacular discoveries in the field of biology. These, along with the widely used principles of probability theory, can be fashioned into a highly useful and easy-to-grasp instrument for the inquirer after truth, and for those who would help others to certainty. This new scientific evidence allows the truth about the Creator to become more apparent. There are many reluctant materialists who may welcome this fact. It also encourages believers who may have been apprehensive. It is a relief to discover that science and logic are friends of the reasonable faith taught in the Bible." |
Note de contenu : |
Introduction (The Golden Molecule / Applying Probability Theory / Science and Philosophy of Science / The Value to You of Certainty / Are Evolution and Science Synonymous? / It Is Now Possible to Be Sure)
1. How the “laws of chance” affect you 2. The heart of modern probability theory 3. The mystery of the left-handed molecules in proteins 4. The odds against proteins with only left-handed components 5. Where natural selection fails 6. Probability and the first proteins 7. How large numbers can help you 8. DNA — “the most golden of all molecules” 9. The remarkable way cells translate DNA 10. Could chance arrange the code for one gene? 11. Why has evolution been widely accepted? 12. The assumed evidence of evolution 13. Examples of phenomena unexplainable by evolution 14. Increasing your certainty Appendices: 1. On the Origin of Left-handed Components in Proteins / 2.The Question of Preference for the Same Hand / 3. Notes on Quastlar’s. The Emergence of Biological Organization / 4. Problems in Molecular Evolution Hypothesis |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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MI/E 025 | MI/E 025 | Livre | Bibliothèque principale | Livres empruntables | Prêt possible Disponible |