Life is a diverse and ubiquitous phenomenon on Earth, characterized by
fundamental features distinguishing living bodies from nonliving
material. Yet it is also so complex that it has long defied precise
definition. This book from a seasoned biologist offers new insights into
the nature of life by illuminating a fascinating architecture of
dualities inherent in its existence and propagation. Life is connected
with individual living beings, yet it is also a collective and
inherently global phenomenon of the material world. It embodies a dual
existence of cycles of phenotypic life, and their unseen driver - an
uninterrupted march of genetic information whose collective immortality
is guaranteed by individual mortality. Although evolution propagates and
tunes species of organisms, the beings produced can be regarded merely
as tools for the survival and cloning of genomes written in an
unchanging code. What are the physical versus informational bases and
driving forces of life, and how do they unite as an integrated system?
What does time mean for individuals, life on the global scale, and the
underlying information? This accessible examination of principles and
evidence shows that a network of dualities lies at the heart of
biological puzzles that have engaged the human mind for millennia.