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T**Y
one of the best explanations of evolution
This is a brilliant book of popular science. It is well written, accurate and intelligent, and one of the best explanations of evolution that I have ever read. It is easy to read and full of great examples to illustrate the concept of evolution. It concentrates on Darwin's less well known books apart from the Origin of Species, and gathers interesting nuggets of information from them to explain the main theory. It is well worth reading for both the scientist and the interested citizen.
D**L
Updating Darwin and his scientific interests
Steve Jones, who is a professor of genetics at University College London and a most engaging writer on evolutionary biology, wrote this book to coincide with the bicentennial of Darwin's birth and the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the publication of "The Origin of Species." He calls his book "Darwin's Island" to emphasize the fact that the vast majority of Darwin's work was on the biota of the island of England following his return from the voyage of the Beagle and not on what he learned during the scant five weeks he spent in the Galapagos Islands as a young man.Darwin wrote a four-volume work on barnacles (over a thousand pages); he wrote on "Orchids and Insects," on the "Expressions of Emotions," on the "Formation of Vegetable Mould by Earthworms," and of course on "The Descent of Man" and other works, comprising in total more than six million words. Jones' intent is to introduce the reader to the wider range of Darwin's work and by doing so demonstrate why Darwin is widely considered the greatest biologist who ever lived.Jones' technique is to devote chapters to Darwin's many interests while bringing us up to date on the current understanding. Thus we read about what Darwin learned about worms, barnacles, insects, insectivore plants, sexual selection, our facial expressions, etc., and how that agrees with or differs from what modern science has discovered. What we find out is that Darwin was amazingly prescient in many areas mainly because he worked so diligently for so many years with the kind of enthusiasm few of us can muster. And it didn't hurt that he was a brilliant man.Darwin could have been a man of leisure because of inherited wealth, but he was driven to discover as much as he could about the natural world. He immersed himself into scientific research, performing experiments as well as reading, and corresponding with other scientists and amateurs from around the world. He dug up the ground around Down House where he lived; he dissected specimens, he worried about the adaptive vigor of his children since he had married his cousin (hence his volume on "Cross and Self-Fertilisation"), he measured things, he explored the woods and streams and seashores of his English "archipelago"; he examined fossils, and all the while he pondered deeply on the nature of life and on how evolution works.The effect of Jones' technique in showing both what Darwin knew in the 19th century and what we know today is to emphasize how the world has changed since Darwin's time. We learn how some species have circumnavigated the globe and caused other species to go extinct, especially how the "weediest" of all species, human beings, have altered and destroyed environments and brought about changes in our use of the natural world that would have probably appalled Darwin.Being a geneticist, Jones knows very well what Darwin could only guess at, that is, how the traits of species are handed down, how "descent with modification" works. And that is another strength of this remarkable and very readable book, demonstrating as Jones does how much Darwin was able to understand and get right without any knowledge of the basic mechanism of inheritance as expressed in genetics. How he would have marveled at what we know today.Jones closes by seeing a "triumphant of the average" as we and other weedy species scurry about the globe mating widely instead of closely as in Darwin's time when people and other creatures seldom encountered opportunities much distant from the place of their birth. He sees what I once called "the browning of society" as natural selection irons out the differences between equatorial humankind and those from northern climes, as Asians marry the English, as Russian tumble weeds spread across the American west. When once it was the rich who had the most children, today it is the poor. Jones notes that "The gulf has closed through restraint by the affluent rather than excess by the poor." He does not speculate on what this change will have on society, but posits that the opportunity for natural selection "is in steep decline," meaning I suppose that evolutionary change in humans will become increasingly static. Musing on how that will play out in the long run, Jones writes darkly: "For Homo sapiens, some nasty surprises no doubt lurk around the corner. Some day, evolution will take its revenge and we may fail in the struggle for existence against ourselves, the biggest ecological challenge of all." (p. 286)(Note: thirteen of my books are now available at Amazon including "Understanding Evolution and Ourselves.")
D**S
Darwin's Island - Steve Jones
Well, I like evolution as a subject immensely, but can only be led into associated topics such as geology and botany with guides who can get some interest into the area for me - in these cases Richard Fortey and Steve Jones in particular.I felt that Darwin's other pursuits must be worth reading about, but more as a responsibility than a pleasure. How wrong I was with this book - I have always admired Steve Jones' style and have even come to trust his material to a considerable material. What I was not really looking forward to, turned out to be the greatest exposition of the power and breadth of evolution I have come across so far (and I have liked many), by linking the flora and fauna into the overall evolutionary framework. And in a style that is so readable.THOROUGHLY recommended as a 'must read'
M**R
evolution for the general reader
This is an enjoyable enough book about evolution for the general reader. Based on Charles Darwin's researches at his home in Kent the book covers plants,barnacles, earthworms, birds, dogs, scarcity, obesity,and much else before concluding with a rather depressing chapter on the likely evoluntionary and biological changes being triggered by modern farming methods and climate change.I enjoyed the book, but was not captivated in the way that I was by the author's more recent work The Serpent's Promise: The Bible Retold as ScienceThe Serpent's Promise: The Bible Retold as Science
I**E
The cover is very deceptive! Leaves one in doubt ...
The cover is very deceptive! Leaves one in doubt about the author's orchid knowledge as the Bee Orchid (illustrated) isn't pollinated by bees. Its self-fertile!
A**D
A must for any library
This book is so packed with information it is difficult to put down when once picked up should be compulsory reading!
H**W
Of worms and barnacles ...
One of the striking things about the The Origin of Species is how much time Darwin spent pottering about in his garden and indeed, as Steve Jones says in his introduction, the great naturalist spent most of his time observing the natural world either at home or on extensive travels throughout Britain. I was delighted, therefore, to find "Darwin's Island".Moral: never judge a book by its cover. Although there are some references to Darwin's garden and travels, this is not the book's main focus, nor is it, despite its historical background, a work of scientific history.What we do get, however, is a review of some of the topics that Darwin studied, many of which are suggested by his lesser known works. The result is a fascinating whirlwind tour of carnivorous plants, insects, orchids, hops, barnacles and earthworms; as well as more predictable topics such as sexual selection. This is a highly readable book aimed firmly at a general readership with no special knowledge of biology. Steve Jones has a neat turn of phrase and a good line in dry humour as well as a gift for drawing together the strands of historical and contemporary scientific thought and placing them into the context of the modern world.Whilst drawing on the roots of modern biology, "Darwin's Island" is set very much in the present and, despite the title, has a global scope. As for the future, after reading this book, you may be left wondering whether the sustainability of our planet and our species has more to do with the fate of earthworms and barnacles than giant pandas.Not quite as advertised, but nevertheless a welcome addition to that other endangered species, the popular science book. The Origin of Species
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