Selected Product: | The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design Paperback Author: Richard Dawkins Publisher: W. W. Norton Release Date: 1996-09-19 ISBN-10: 0393315703 ISBN-13: 9780393315707 List Price: $15.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The God Delusion ISBN-10: 0618918248 ISBN-13: 9780618918249 List Price:$15.95 The Selfish Gene: 30th Anniversary Edition--with a new Introduction by the Author ISBN-10: 0199291152 ISBN-13: 9780199291151 List Price:$15.95 God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything ISBN-10: 0446579807 ISBN-13: 9780446579803 List Price:$24.99 Letter to a Christian Nation (Vintage) ISBN-10: 0307278778 ISBN-13: 9780307278777 List Price:$11.00 The Ancestor's Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution ISBN-10: 061861916X ISBN-13: 9780618619160 List Price:$16.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design by Richard Dawkins (ISBN-10: 0393315703, ISBN-13: 9780393315707). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design by Richard Dawkins (ISBN-10: 0393315703, ISBN-13: 9780393315707). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com "The best general account of evolution I have read in recent years."—E. O. Wilson. With a new introduction.
Twenty years after its original publication, The Blind Watchmaker, framed with a new introduction by the author, is as prescient and timely a book as ever. The watchmaker belongs to the eighteenth-century theologian William Paley, who argued that just as a watch is too complicated and functional to have sprung into existence by accident, so too must all living things, with their far greater complexity, be purposefully designed. Charles Darwin's brilliant discovery challenged the creationist arguments; but only Richard Dawkins could have written this elegant riposte. Natural selection—the unconscious, automatic, blind, yet essentially nonrandom process Darwin discovered—is the blind watchmaker in nature. A good introduction | Customer Rating: | | This is a very good introduction to the concepts of evolution for someone who is new to the subject. | A good Dawkins primer | Customer Rating: | | This is a truly wonderful place to start for anyone interested in Dawkins' series of forays into being human. Dense, but with some jargon and some lovely prose, it will educate even the most seasoned biology student. | Why Does Blind Produce Design? | Customer Rating: | The whole thesis of "The Blind Watchmaker" is that there is no design in nature.
Yet we see design everywhere: Is it merely an illusion?
The human body is an amazingly designed machine;
The biosphere of the earth is amazingly designed for human and animal life;
If natural selection is blind and random (and I concede that it is)how and why does it result in astonishingly designed organisms and environments?
I claim that Richard Dawkins has overlooked Factor X which fashions design from random selection or does he deny what his very eyes reveal?
His empirical data is persuasive in identifying Natural Selection as the mechanism behind the variety and complexity of living things, but how can he deny that the result is not only design but rational order and purpose?
I claim that with all of his powers of observation, his instruments of investigation and his gift of deduction he has overlooked the factor, power or mechanism which brings order out of randomness and purpose out of blind change. I call it Factor X and claim it is to biology what Einstein's Relativity is to Physics.
| Excellent book | Customer Rating: | Dawkins says evolution consists of two things: variation and selection. Variation (in the form of mutation) is indeed the result of random chance. Selection, however, is not at all random, and (when acting on variations) eventually results in the things we recognize as "life".
Most people are unaware that science is now starting to focus in earnest on prebiotic evolution, or what Dawkins has called "universal evolution". Just this week the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published an article on this.
Dawkins does an excellent job of describing the difference between biotic evolution and prebiotic evolution (biotic evolution replicates; prebiotic "evolution" is more like a sieve that "sorts" things and passes no or little information forward. Prebiotic evolution explains stellar evolution and the transformation of our solar system from a cloud of gas and dust to the clockwork-like machinery we see in the night sky. I found this book to be quite readable and engaging. | The Blind Watchmaker | Customer Rating: | | Not an easy book to read, but well worth the effort. Understanding the evidence and arguments for evolution requires effort and thought, whereas believing in invisible and untestable gods is easy, which is why most people choose the latter. Dawkins explains clearly why evolution is the best, indeed the only rational explanation for life as it exists on Earth (other than the FSM, of course. Arrrr!) |
|