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Life as We Made It : How 50,000 Years of Human Innovation Refined--And Redefined--Nature[¾çÀå]

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¡°A brilliant combination of science, natural history, and first-person experience, Life as We Made It shows how our species has been manipulating nature for nearly as long as we¡¯ve been around. Anyone who wants to better understand the future of life - human and otherwise - should read this book.¡±

¡ªJennifer Doudna, winner of the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry

¡°Shapiro takes readers on a succinct and compelling journey through historical events, inventions, and decisions that have forever changed the course of life on Earth¡¦ In what is perhaps the greatest accomplishment of Life as We Made It, Shapiro clearly articulates key questions whose answers will define how we think about and use the power we now yield.¡±¡ªScience

¡°Shapiro¡¯s point, throughout the book, is that we¡¯ve always meddled with nature; the answer is not to stop meddling, but to meddle better¡¦ With this clear-eyed account of its humanitarian potential, Shapiro has done the field a great service.¡±
¡ªNature

¡°In her thoughtful and entertaining Life as We Made It: How 50,000 Years of Human Innovation Refined?and Redefined?Nature, Beth Shapiro argues that humankind¡¯s profound and protracted interventions have blurred the distinction between the natural and artificial worlds.¡±
¡ªWall Street Journal

¡°A detailed exploration of some of the most influential technologies of our time. It also offers a tantalising glimpse of what might be in store in the future, when humanity starts to mix things up all over again.¡±¡ªThe New Scientist

¡°Humans are a force of nature. This paradoxical thought is the glue that holds Life as We Made It together. But it is not the environment changing effects of human activity on land, sea and air that intrigue Beth Shapiro?or not directly. Instead, she looks at how people have altered living organisms themselves, exerting an evolutionary pressure on other species¡¦ In an age when ¡®technology¡¯ has become synonymous with the information kind, it is worth being reminded that other sorts are available. And with one of them people can, if they so choose, remake themselves.¡±
¡ªThe Economist

¡°Life as We Made It presents a compelling vision that encourages us to be more open-minded.¡±
¡ªNew Statesman

¡°For anyone curious about the past, present and future of human interference in nature, Life as We Made It offers a compelling survey of the possibilities and pitfalls. Shapiro is an engaging, clear-eyed guide, leading readers through the technical tangles and ethical thickets of this not-so-new frontier. Along the way, the book glitters with lively, humorous vignettes from Shapiro¡¯s career in ancient DNA research. Her tales are often rife with awe.¡±
¡ªScience News

"Unmissable."¡ªReaction

¡°[a] fun-filled survey...Shapiro¡¯s anecdotes are full of energy...Perfect for fans of Mary Roach, this is science writing with much to savor."¡ªPublishers Weekly

¡°The scientific study of ancient DNA preserved in extinct species and the possibility of de extinction make for truly fascinating reading. Employing just the right amount of paleontology, history, genomics, and archaeology, Shapiro warns that we stand on the precipice of fashioning a new, unnatural nature. The risk of messing up the future of other species and even the planet itself looms large.¡±
¡ªBooklist

¡°For the past two decades, Beth Shapiro has pioneered using ancient DNA to understand the diversity of life. In Life as We Made It, her twin passions for cutting-edge science and natural history leap from every page. This book will entertain and challenge you to think in new ways about our role in the future of life on Earth.¡±

¡ªNeil Shubin, evolutionary biologist and author of Your Inner Fish

¡°In this brilliant new book, biologist Beth Shapiro tells the incredible story of how we¡¯re remaking much of nature and lays out a thoughtful path for how we can survive and thrive by learning to more wisely apply our god-like powers.¡± ¡ªJamie Metzl, author of Hacking Darwin

¡°Shapiro chronicles the many ways humans have influenced the evolutionary trajectories of other species, from prehistory through the present day. Tools like CRISPR are just the latest way we have shaped the life on this planet. She effectively makes the case that our use of evolution as a tool is ethically acceptable, if done carefully and with informed consent.¡±¡ªEmma Marris, author of Wild Souls

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Chapter Page
Prologue - Providence 1
Part I The Way It Is
Chapter 1 Bone Mining 13
Chapter 2 Origin Story 43
Chapter 3 Blitzkrieg 69
Chapter 4 Lactase Persistence 103
Chapter 5 Lake Cow Bacon 135
Part II The Way It Could Be
Chapter 6 Polled 171
Chapter 7 Intended Consequences 215
Chapter 8 Turkish Delight 259
Acknowledgments 293
Bibliography and References 297
Index 329

Ã¥¼Ò°³

From the first dog to the first beefalo, from farming to CRISPR, the human history of remaking nature

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Shapiro, Beth [Àú] ½ÅÀ۾˸² SMS½Åû
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