Background
Elsasser, Walter Maurice was born on March 20, 1904 in Mannheim, Federal Republic Germany. Son of Moritz and Johanna (Masius) Elsasser. came to the United States, 1936, naturalized, 1940.
( Are living organisms―as Descartes argued―just machines?...)
Are living organisms―as Descartes argued―just machines? Or is the nature of life such that it can never be fully explained by mechanistic models? In this thought-provoking and controversial book, eminent geophysicist Walter M. Elsasser argues that the behavior of living organisms cannot be reduced to physico-chemical causality. Suggesting that molecular biology today is at the same point as Newtonian physics on the eve of the quantum revolution, Elsasser lays the foundation for a theoretical biology that points the way toward a natural philosophy of organic life. Explicitly repudiating "vitalism" (the notion that the laws of nature need to be modified when applied to living organisms), Elsasser argues instead that the structural complexity of even a single living cell is "transcomputational"―that is, beyond the power of any imaginable system to compute. Beginning from this insight, Elsasser leads the reader through a step-by-step process that ultimately arrives at the conclusion that living and non-living matter are separated by "a no-man's land of irrationality." Trained in Germany as a physicist, Elsasser first pondered the implications of quantum mechanics for biology as early as 1951. The more closely he studied the inherent complexity of life, the more skeptical he became of the reductionist view of organisms as tiny machines. "An organism," he concluded, "is a source of causal chains which cannot be traced beyond a terminal point because they are lost in the unfathomable complexity of the organism." Like the physicist who works within the bounds of an unfathomable universe, Elsasser argues, the biologist must seek answers within a system that is no less unfathomable.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0801859700/?tag=2022091-20
Elsasser, Walter Maurice was born on March 20, 1904 in Mannheim, Federal Republic Germany. Son of Moritz and Johanna (Masius) Elsasser. came to the United States, 1936, naturalized, 1940.
Doctor of Philosophy, University Goettingen, Federal Republic Germany, 1927. Doctor of Philosophy (honorary), University Manchester, England, 1989.
Instructor, U. Frankfurt, Federal Republic Germany, 1930-1933; research fellow, U. Paris-Sorbonne, 1933-1936; research fellow, California Institute Technology, 1936-1941; staff war research on radar, United States Signal Corps and Radio Corporation of America laboratories, 1941-1947; professor physics, University of Pennsylvania, 1947-1950; professor physics, U. Utah, 1950-1956; professor physics, University of California at La Jolla, 1956-1962; department chairman physics, U. New Mexico, Albuquerque, 1960-1961; professor geophysics, department geology, Princeton University, 1962-1968; research professor, U. Maryland., College Park, 1968-1974; Adjunct Professor department earth and planetary science, Johns Hopkins University, 1985-1986; Homewood professor, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 1987-1989. Pioneering researcher in planetary magnetism and plate techtonics.
( Are living organisms―as Descartes argued―just machines?...)
( The Description for this book, Atom and Organism: A New...)
(Book by Elsasser, Walter M.)
Fellow American Physical Society, American Geophysical Union (Bowie medal 1959, Fleming medal 1971). Member National Academy of Sciences.
Married Margaret Trahey, July 17, 1937 (divorced). Children: Barbara, William. Married Suzanne Rosenfeld, June 24, 1964 (deceased).