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Togetherness - by Rowan Hooper (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- A wondrous, eye-opening exploration of symbiosis in nature--from microscopic cells to the earth's atmosphere--and the ways life is connected, codependent, and poetry in motion.
- About the Author: ROWAN HOOPER is podcast editor at New Scientist and host of the New Scientist Weekly podcast.
- 400 Pages
- Science, Life Sciences
Description
Book Synopsis
A wondrous, eye-opening exploration of symbiosis in nature--from microscopic cells to the earth's atmosphere--and the ways life is connected, codependent, and poetry in motion.
Everything on earth hinges on relationships: animals and bacteria, the soil and its microbes, plants and the molecules floating in the air. Often, these partnerships are subtle--undetectable by the eye--but life as we know it wouldn't exist without them.
In Togetherness, journalist and evolutionary biologist Rowan Hooper leads us into fascinating, otherworldly spaces--the earth's rich underbrush, murky ocean depths, the human body's complex architecture--to uncover the poetic truth that we are all intimately connected. From moths that rely on sloths for reproduction to orchids' partnerships with fungi to our own relationships with the biosphere, Hooper frames lessons from great thinkers across time--scientists, philosophers, and artists--and emphasizes, with wit and joy, William Blake's claim that "Every thing that lives / Lives not alone." Through page-turning examples, Hooper uses symbiosis to clarify ideas about major scientific topics, including evolution, agriculture, climate change, sustainability, and humanity at large. Now more than ever, symbiosis can help us solve some of the biggest issues of our day.
Dazzling, immensely clever, and suffused with wonder, Togetherness bridges the realms of humanity and nature, and proves symbiosis is a key to understanding ourselves and the world beyond.
About the Author
ROWAN HOOPER is podcast editor at New Scientist and host of the New Scientist Weekly podcast. He has a PhD in evolutionary biology and worked in a conservation biology lab in Japan for five years, before joining the Japan Times in Tokyo and later taking up a fellowship in a physics lab at Trinity College Dublin. His writing has appeared in The Economist, The Guardian, Wired, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post, and he is the author of Super Human and How to Spend a Trillion Dollars. He lives in London with his partner and two daughters.