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WELLS, H.G.; Julian S. Huxley and G.P. Wells [James D. Watson].

The Science of Life.

London: Cassell and Company Limited , 1931.

$2,600.00
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First Edition of The Science of Life; From the Library of Molecular Biologist James D. Watson with His Ownership Signature
First edition of "the first modern textbook of biology." Quarto, original cloth, illustrated. From the library of James D. Watson with his ownership signature to the front free endpaper. James D. Watson was a molecular biologist, geneticist, and biophysicist, best known for co-discovering the structure of DNA in 1953 alongside Francis Crick and Rosalind Franklin. Their groundbreaking work on the double helix model of DNA laid the foundation for modern genetics and revolutionized the biological sciences. Watson’s contribution to science, particularly in the field of molecular biology, earned him the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962, shared with Crick and Maurice Wilkins. Beyond his scientific achievements, Watson also played a key role in advancing genetic research through his leadership at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. His work and subsequent publications, including The Double Helix (1968), which provides a personal account of the discovery, have sparked significant ethical debates in the scientific community, particularly regarding his controversial views on genetics and intelligence. In very good condition.
The Science of Life is a book written by H. G. Wells, Julian Huxley and G. P. Wells, gives a popular account of all major aspects of biology as known in the 1920s. It has been called "the first modern textbook of biology" and "the best popular introduction to the biological sciences". Wells's most recent biographer notes that The Science of Life "is not quite as dated as one might suppose". In undertaking The Science of Life, H. G. Wells, who had published The Outline of History a decade earlier, selling over two million copies, desired the same sort of treatment for biology. He thought of his readership as "the intelligent lower middle classes ... [not] idiots, half-wits ... greenhorns, religious fanatics ... smart women or men who know all that there is to be known". Julian Huxley, the grandson of T. H. Huxley under whom Wells had studied biology, and his son "Gip", a zoologist, divided the initial writing between them; H. G. Wells revised, dealt (with the help of his literary agent, A. P. Watt) with publishers, and acted as a strict taskmaster, often obliging his collaborators to sit down and work together and keeping them on a tight schedule. (H. G. Wells had begun the book during his wife's final illness and is said to have used work on the book as a way to keep his mind off his loss.) The text as published is presented as the common work of a "triplex author". H. G. Wells took 40% of the royalties; the remainder was split between Huxley and Wells's son. In his will, H. G. Wells left his rights in the book to G. P. Wells.
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