May 06 2010
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Everybody knows that when it comes down to the final quiz in a game of Trivial Pursuit that they should beget me try and reply a science request because I know exquisite noteworthy nothing about science and nature. This is because the one thing I knew about high school biology was that you dissected animals and being sick in front of the smartest girls in school did not appeal to me at all. So I took Life Through the Microscope (it eager drawing) and Ecology (it was the only class that fit my schedule) and missed out on Biology, Chemistry and Physics. However, since I did my dissertation on the heinous Scopes “Monkey” Trial I do have something of an interest in the controversy over evolution if not the understanding itself. This seven-part series exploring various facets of evolution was perfect so someone like me who insists on having theory of any sort mixed with a heavy dose of practice.
“Evolution” is as powerful about the profound impact the evolutionary process has had on our concept of the world around us as it is on the various versions of the theory that have been expounded in scientific textbooks for the past century. The series basically focuses on five key concepts regarding evolution, sandwiched between episodes that constitute a dramatic introduction and a controversial coda:
“Darwin’s Unsafe Thought” offers dramatizations of key moments in Darwin’s life along with contemporary talking heads explaining the profound implications of the evolutionary theory and the space it holds in the scientific community today as a pivotal plan. It takes a while to adjust to the episodic come of the dramatizations, which advance and go without a sincere sense of regularity, but since they dramatized the distinguished respond of Huxley to Bishop Wilberforce and other key moments in the popularization of evolution there is a definite effectiveness to it all. What you accumulate from this episode is a better understanding of what the initial complaints were to evolutionary theory and who was making them.
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“Large Transformations” explores the evolutionary changes that caused the unbelievable diversity of animal life that exists on earth. The focus is on the development of the four-limbed body understanding, which is explained in the context of how animal life moved from water to land and eventually to human beings, thereby answering the key request of why are human connected to all life.
“Extinction!” represents the flip side of evolutionary transformations, explaining the how and why tedious the fact that 99.9 percent of all species that have ever lived on earth are now obsolete. This leads to the inspiring expect as to whether human beings are going to cause the next mass extinction on the planet.
“The Evolutionary Arms Speed” puts the entire idea of natural selection and survival of the fittest in the context of humanity’s battles with microorganisms, looking at a case explore regarding the reemergence of tuberculosis in Russian prisons. With the alarming spread of resistance among pathogens that cause disease, the episode explains how this particular “accelerate” offers the major threat to human existence. The scary query here is whether we are fighting a battle we cannot fetch.
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“Why Sex? ” makes the contention that in evolutionary terms sex is more vital than life itself. But on a more pragmatic level is addresses the expect of whether males are indispensable to perpetuate the species, looking at a wide variety of case studies drawn from nature. This episode also explains the principle of monogamy in evolutionary terms.
“The Mind’s Huge Bang” addresses the ask of why humans are the dominant species on earth. The retort is found in the past, when something happened to conventional humans to trigger a creative, technological, and social explosion, which ultimately allowed humans to dominate the planet. The episode tries to declare (literally) the feeble forces that contributed to the emergence of the mind of the current human being.
“What About God? ” is the coda to the series in that it returns to the initial seek information from of Darwin’s day regarding the conflict between evolution and religion. The debate is presented within the context of a college student whose family is not joyful with what he is learning about evolution at Wesleyan College, a group of high school students trying to catch their local school board to allow the teaching of creationism, and the activities by adults on both sides of the expect to pick up this pivotal battle. I think the episode to be remarkably even-handed, but then I do not judge there is an inherent conflict between the two, which invalidates my concept for proper believers on both sides.
Overall I like the fact that “Evolution” goes for depth rather than breadth. The case studies, at least to my uneducated mind, reach across as being representative of the mutter under discussion. The DVD series also features access to the Evolution Web region with its interactive games, activities, and biographies, so those who would like to accept additional information and insight on any one of these topics can easily do so. There are also student lessons for teachers who want to work these episodes into their science classes and a printable teacher’s guide (remember, “Evolution” was produced by WGBH Boston, which means we are talking-surprise-public television) .
Wow!!! This series is as improbable as any laypersons textbook I’ve ever read on evolution. Each episode is not only a discourse (in the most envigorating contrivance possible) about a different aspect of evolution, and not only does each justify the theories within that aspect but each does a ample job of making them relevant to life today. What does ‘cultural evolution’ of transportation have to do with the cycle of extinctions. How can is the success of the AIDS virus to be attributed to what can only be called a flaw in its copying apparatus? How can we exhaust that knowledge to our advantage in the struggle against its effects?
Honestly, there are only minute criticisms I have about each. The first - and how relatively trivial it is - is that for every episode, I was able to reflect of 4 more episodes that I would have liked to examine, or at least 4 more topics that each could’ve covered. Evolutionary psychology was, to a colossal degree, left unexplored but for a 10 cramped passage. The punctuated equilibrium vs. Dawkinian incremental evolution debate - for as specialized as it seems it is mild a Colossal debate within biology - was ignored and most of all, sociobiology was not touched on. So many facets so petite DVD plot! Level-headed, I couldn’t select away a star fair for these trifles.
Here’s a brief overview of each episode and its highlights.
Darwins Unsafe View - Probably the dullest episode of all. Alternates between Darwins relevance today and BBC style reenactment of his life
Great Transformations - The origin (or suspected origin) of life and from it, the quadropods - that is, four leggeed spined creatures. Consuming discussion of our similarities to other quadropods in past and demonstrate.
Extinctions - If 99% of animals are primitive, will we be and why are we not yet? Helpful discussion of interconnectedness of eco-system - one thing propping up others.
Evolutionary Arms Speed - Tantalizing episode about the head-to-head competition for survival. Why are adaptations handy and what really is human beings helpul adaptation? Is it language, tool making, conceptual thinking…what?
Why Sex? - Why males are on the surface superfluous (gulp) but really a sterling thing evolutionarily (glance, I always content women we’re noble for something) . Different male/female connections in different species and how species attract opposite sex. Obedient but short lead into evolutionary biology, especially ideas of Geoffrey Miller.
The Minds Broad Bang - Another enormous episode dealing with how, why and when the mind may have developed. Why did such a odd mutation present successful? Was it all at once or in petite improvements? The episode is a bit one-sided as it speculates that by in great, language was the brains function rather than conceptual notion.
What about God? - One of the best episodes and the most philosophical in nature. Why do creationists disapprove evolution and why do evolutionists go out of their intention to block creationism from schools. Meet high school and college (Christian college) students who are striving to derive a connection between evolution and God. As one of the few atheists I’ve met who DOES NOT hold evolution as given, I found this episode, chock corpulent of Christians who believed in evolution, too, a wonderful closer of the series.
Overall, the only other comment/complaint I had (again, no subracted star) was that contrary to the last reviewer, I believe that any science that calls itself a science needs to be able to welcome criticism. It would’ve been first-rate for this series to focus a bit more on, not only outside criticisms like creationism, but criticisms from the inside, like Steven Gould’s ’spandrel’ idea. Collected, if the intersted viewer wants to digest those, there is a surfeit of literature. This DVD status will rep you more alive to in evolution than you view possible. Check it out!
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