“The individual organism is something whose existence most biologists take for granted, probably because its parts do pull together in such a united and integrated way. Questions about life are conventionally questions about organisms. Biologists ask why organisms do this, why organisms do that. They frequently ask why organisms group themselves into societies. They don't ask — though they should — why living matter groups itself into organisms in the first place. Why isn't the sea still a primordial battleground of free and independent replicators? Why did the ancient replicators club together to make, and reside in, lumbering robots, and why are those robots — individual bodies, you and me — so large and so complicated?”
Quote by Richard Dawkins
Book:The Selfish Gene
Work
The Selfish Gene
Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene delves into the idea that genes are the driving force behind the evolution of life, emphasizing their role in survival and reproduction. The book presents a groundbreaking theory that challenges traditional views of evolution and offers a new perspective on the nature of life and its processes. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: The Year of Magical Thinking
“The consequences of incompetence in battle are final.”
Source: Call Sign Chaos: Learning to Lead
Source: Lifemaker
“You gotta look into your heart to get to the heart of the issue”
