BOOKREVIEWS
N° R1001
Published in Dec 2007 by CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Address : The Edinburgh
Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK
Telephone : 01223
312393
Fax : 01223 315052
Internet : www.cambridge.org
ISBN : 9780521871020 - 526 pages –
hardback
This highly interdisciplinary book highlights many of
the ways in which chemistry plays a crucial role in making life an evolutionary
possibility in the universe. Cosmologists and particle physicists have often
explored how the observed laws and constants of nature lie within a narrow
range that allows complexity and life to evolve and adapt. Here, these
anthropic considerations are diversified in a host of new ways to identify the
most sensitive features of biochemistry and astrobiology. Celebrating the
classic 1913 work of Lawrence J. Henderson, The Fitness of the Environment for
Life, this book looks at the delicate balance between chemistry and the ambient
conditions in the universe that permit complex chemical networks and structures
to exist. It will appeal to a broad range of scientists, academics, and others
interested in the origin and existence of life in our universe.

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