Review
"...isn't just a book about scientific thinking: this is a book about how scientists think...much the better for it..." (Guardian, 29 July 2004)
"...Trotman's thoughts are ingenious and plausible, and his analysis of hard questions about the subject is insightful..." (Focus, November 04)
"...a courageous, ingenious and successful attempt to identify irreducible complexity as the essence of life...a pleasure to read..." (www.home.planet.nl 23rd November 2004)
"...very good presentation with thought-provoking ideas about the origins of life..." (www.drydredges.org)
"…well-produced and interesting stuff…" (The Biologist, July 2006)
From the Inside Flap
Traces of the earliest forms of life on Earth reveal that they were already highly complex, consisting of cells, genes, proteins and an intricate metabolism. Life at the biochemical level was in many ways as complex in those early organisms as it is today, which leaves us with a massive gap in our knowledge about how life got started in a relatively short space of time. We know that evolution takes millions of years to complete even small changes in animals and plants. Can we really accept that transition from simple chemicals to primitive yet complex life forms - and ultimately to humans - occurred in such a short time-span?
The key questions thrown up by this problem of timing are addressed in The Feathered Onion. Clive Trotman investigates the origins of life from our first attempts to understand the age of the Earth to the latest scientific techniques and their implications for our current understanding of where we came from.