An Introduction To Biological Evolution


Download An Introduction To Biological Evolution PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get An Introduction To Biological Evolution book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

An Introduction to Biological Evolution


An Introduction to Biological Evolution

Author: Kenneth V. Kardong

language: en

Publisher: McGraw-Hill Science, Engineering & Mathematics

Release Date: 2005


DOWNLOAD





Written for a general college audience, this book offers an introduction to the principles and significance of Darwinian evolution. It differs from most other textbooks on evolution in three fundamental ways: first, it is intended for students taking evolution early in their studies; second, it examines the intellectual significance of Darwinian evolution; and third, the text departs from the standard treatment of evolution in other textbooks, wherein the arguments are reductionist, molecular, and overwhelmingly genetic in emphasis. Ken Kardong, also author of Vertebrates; Comparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution, is known for his accessible writing style. His almost conversational approach to this topic puts the reader at ease while learning evolutionary concepts. The result is an inviting book that will be read.

Introduction to Biological Evolution


Introduction to Biological Evolution

Author: Kenneth Kardong

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 2007


DOWNLOAD





Introduction to Biological Evolution


Introduction to Biological Evolution

Author: Kenneth Kardong

language: en

Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education

Release Date: 2007-01-08


DOWNLOAD





Written for a general college audience, this book offers an introduction to the principles and significance of Darwinian evolution. It differs from most other textbooks on evolution in three fundamental ways: First, it is intended for students taking evolution early in their studies. Second, it examines the intellectual significance of Darwinian evolution. Third, the text departs from the standard treatment of evolution in other textbooks, wherein the arguments are reductionist, molecular, and overwhelmingly genetic in emphasis. Ken Kardong, also author of Vertebrates; Comparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution, is known for his accessible writing style. His almost conversational approach to this topic puts the reader at ease while learning evolutionary concepts. The result is an inviting book -- that will be read.