Making Sense of Life


Book Description

What do biologists want? How will we know when we have 'made sense' of life? Explanations in the biological sciences are provisional and partial, judged by criteria as heterogenous as their subject matter. This text accounts for this diversity.




Making Sense in the Life Sciences


Book Description

The Making Sense series offers clear, concise guides to research and writing for students at all levels of undergraduate study. The volumes in the Making Sense series - covering the humanities, social sciences, life sciences, engineering, psychology, religious studies, and education - areintended for students in any undergraduate course with a research and writing component, but are especially appropriate for those at the first-year level.Intended for life science students, Making Sense in the Life Sciences provides detailed information on writing essays and lab reports; conducting research and using academic sources; grammar, punctuation, and usage; conducting presentations; using graphics; and more. This revised edition includes acomplete CMS update; new discussions on writing for an audience, the importance of DOIs, and graphics in oral presentations; and more examples of key concepts.




Making Sense


Book Description

An indispensable guide for students in any area of the life sciences-including biology, biochemistry, health sciences, pharmacology, and zoology-Making Sense in the Life Sciences offers up-to-date, detailed information on writing essays and lab reports conducting research evaluating Internet sources using electronic journal databases illustrating work with, figures, tables, and graphs documenting sources with the latest CSE and CMS guidelines avoiding plagiarism eliminating problems with grammar, punctuation, and usage delivering oral presentations using graphic presentation software collaborating on group projects studying for tests and exams preparing resumes and letters of application Book jacket.




Evolution


Book Description

Evolution: Making Sense of Life brings technical rigor and conceptual depth that today’s biology students require. Zimmer, an award-winning New York Times columnist, brings compelling storytelling to the book, bringing evolutionary research to life through a narrative sure to capture the attention of evolution students. With riveting stories about evolutionary biologists at work everywhere from the Arctic to tropical rainforests to hospital wards, the book is a reading adventure designed to grab the imagination of students, showing them exactly why it is that evolution makes such brilliant sense of life. This edition of Evolution: Making Sense of Life is now supported in SaplingPlus. Created and supported by the author and other educators, SaplingPlus’s instructional online homework drives student success and saves educators’ time. Automatically graded homework problem contains hints, answer-specific feedback, and solutions to ensure that students find the help they need.




Can Science Make Sense of Life?


Book Description

Since the discovery of the structure of DNA and the birth of the genetic age, a powerful vocabulary has emerged to express science’s growing command over the matter of life. Armed with knowledge of the code that governs all living things, biology and biotechnology are poised to edit, even rewrite, the texts of life to correct nature’s mistakes. Yet, how far should the capacity to manipulate what life is at the molecular level authorize science to define what life is for? This book looks at flash points in law, politics, ethics, and culture to argue that science’s promises of perfectibility have gone too far. Science may have editorial control over the material elements of life, but it does not supersede the languages of sense-making that have helped define human values across millennia: the meanings of autonomy, integrity, and privacy; the bonds of kinship, family, and society; and the place of humans in nature.




Making Sense of Journals in the Life Sciences


Book Description

Looks at scientific journals in the life sciences to explain their variety. Written to aid those who see their budgets decreasing while the price of serials increases, this guide describes the life science journals, comparing the leading titles via competitive advantages and cost efficiency.




Making Sense in Psychology and the Life Sciences


Book Description

Making Sense in Psychology and the Life Sciences combines the composition guidelines associated with the Making Sense series, while addressing the particular needs of psychology and life science students. It explains how to: conduct library research, including computer searches; develop a topic; take reliable notes, and organize information and arguments; write an essay, research a paper, lab report, or honours thesis; prepare papers using the APA Manual (5th ed.) guidelines; use sources and quotations; present tables and figures; document references; write tests and examinations; avoid common errors in grammar and usage; and meet ethical standards in scientific research and writing.




Making Sense in the Life Sciences


Book Description

Part of the best-selling Making Sense series, Making Sense in the Life Sciences is an indispensable guide for students in any area of the life sciences - including biology, biochemistry, health sciences, pharmacology, and zoology. Maintaining the clear, straightforward style of the otherbooks in the series, this book outlines topics such as writing essays and lab reports, conducting research, evaluating Internet sources, using electronic journal databases, and documenting sources.




Making Sense Of The Senses


Book Description

Making Sense of the Senses provides an easily understandable and engaging overview of the senses. The book allows readers insights into how humans and other animals perceive the world, reflecting a level of knowledge similar to that acquired by studying neuroscience at an undergraduate level. In order to offer an accessible introduction to the science, it uses relatable examples to uncover the history, evolution, and biological principles of the way we see, smell, hear, taste, touch and more.Rather than only focusing on the five primary senses you can see on the cover, Making Sense of the Senses dives deep into the various methods through which life across the planet surveys the world, and guides the reader through the lesser-known methods through which we humans interpret our surroundings. In this way, we come across some amazing abilities that we often forget we possess.Humans are nevertheless rather average creatures compared to many sensory specialists. So when we compare our relatively modest capabilities to those of other species across the animal kingdom, we are forced to yield our anthropocentric sense of supremacy. This book will introduce how biological life developed the capacity to detect magnetic fields, radioactivity, and many more phenomena that until recently were inaccessible to humans.By contextualising and comparing how the senses operate, this book covers the sensory systems in a way no popular science book has previously done. If you are starting your career in neuroscience, or simply want to learn more about the ways our biology guides us through life, Making Sense of the Senses will change the way you think about our perception of the world.




Making Sense


Book Description

The Making Sense series comprises five concise, readable guides to research and writing for use by students at all levels of undergraduate study. Designed especially for students in psychology and the life sciences, including biology and zoology, this book outlines the general principles ofstyle, grammar, and usage, while covering such issues as how to prepare papers using APA guidelines, how to write research proposals and honours theses, and how to use graphic presentation software when giving an oral presentation. This fourth edition of the book has new material on evaluatingInternet sources and avoiding plagiarism, as well as new and updated examples.