Units of Life

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Product details

  • ISBN 9780192857194
  • Weight: 629g
  • Dimensions: 164 x 242mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jun 2025
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Where are the edges of a tree? What makes arms different from daughters? What have corals got in common with Necker cubes? Biological individuality has become a dizzying topic since researchers began, at the turn of the millennium, to realize that we can't go on taking organisms for granted as basic particles of the living world. Ellen Clarke takes us on a disorienting romp through the natural world and argues that our way of conceptualizing living things-of understanding life as carved up into separate chunks-is best understood as an idealization. Vivid examples animate some fairly arcane philosophical topics concerning identity over time, natural kinds, and the fundamental furniture of reality, as well as serious biological issues concerning natural selection, the emergence of compositional hierarchies, and the evolution of cooperation. Readers will come away with newfound respect for humankind's ingenuity in engineering concepts that make sense of the complex and ever-changing wonders of life on earth.
Ellen Clarke is a Philosopher of Biology with interests in evolutionary theory, scientific metaphysics and ontology, moral and cultural evolution, evolutionary game theory, and conservation ecology. She has two children and is Associate Professor at the University of Leeds, having got her PhD in Bristol and then held postdoctoral positions at the Konrad Lorenz Institute in Vienna, and at All Souls College, University of Oxford.