A vak o ra smester

gondolatok a darwin evolu cio elme letro l

286 pages

Hungarian language

Published Sept. 29, 1994 by Akade miai, Mezo gazda.

ISBN:
978-963-05-6706-0
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
780656756

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (3 reviews)

In De blinde horlogemaker spelen zowel Paley als Darwin een belangrijke rol. De eerstgenoemde als belichaming van het geloof in een voor ede mens onbekende doelgerichtheid van de natuur. Darwin als ontdekker van het principe van de natuurlijke selectie. Uiterst boeiend schrijft Dawkins over zijn pogingen Darwins evolutieleer met behulp van computers na te bootsen. Het kunstmatige landschap van de computer verschaft meer inzicht in de ontwikkeling van de genen, de belangrijkste bouwstenen van het leven. [(bron)][1]

[1]: www.bol.com/nl/p/de-blinde-horlogemaker/1001004005445663/?country=BE

8 editions

Review of 'The blind watchmaker' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Imagine you’re on a hike and you find a watch on the ground. You would rightly assume the existence of a watchmaker. Dawkins adapts this creationist argument to describe how evolution by natural selection can “design” complex structures and new species, without any “supervision.” Throughout this very readable book, Dawkins draws on fascinating examples from nature, adaptations such as bat sonar and electrolocation, as well as things like sight, flight, and sexual displays, to make his points about how these things develop incrementally. All the while he presents these things from a sort of engineering perspective, even using analogies such as a “stretched DC8” to counter Hey the strawman of a tornado ripping through a junkyard and assembling a Boeing 747. The pinnacle of this is his own computer program, which he uses to demonstrate how a mutation of a small number of “genes” combined with some sort of selection …

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