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Course Lecture Titles

1.The Scope of "Life"
2.More on the Origin of Life
3. The Organism and the Cell
4. Proteins—How Things Get Done in the Cell
5.Which Molecule Holds the Code?
6.The Double Helix
7. The Nuts and Bolts of Replicating DNA
8.The Central Dogma
9. The Genetic Code
10. From DNA to RNA
11. From RNA to Protein
12. When Mistakes Happen
13.Dividing DNA Between Dividing Cells
14. Mendel and His Pea Plants
15. How Sex Leads to Variation
16. Genes and Chromosomes
17.Charles Darwin and "The Origin of Species"
18. Natural Selection in Action
19. Reconciling Darwin and Mendel
20. Mechanisms of Evolutionary Change
21. What Are Species and How Do New Ones Arise?
22. More on the Origin of New Species
23. Reconstructing Evolution
24. The History of Life, Revisited
25. From Cells to Organisms
26. Control of Gene Expression I
27. Control of Gene Expression II
28. Getting Proteins to the Right Place
29. Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
30. How Cells Talk—Signals and Receptors
31. How Cells Talk—Ways That Cells Respond
32. From One Cell to Many in an Organism
33. Patterns of Early Development
34. Determination and Differentiation
35. Induction and Pattern Formation
36.Genes and Development
37. Homeostasis
38. Hormones in Animals
39. What is Special about Neurons?
40. Action Potentials and Synapses
41. Synaptic Integration and Memory
42. Sensory Function
43. How Muscles Work
44. The Innate Immune System
45. The Acquired Immune System
46. Form and Function in Plants I
47.Form and Function in Plants II
48.Behavior as an Adaptive Trait
49. Energy and Resources in Living Systems
50. How Energy is Harnessed by Cells
51. Enzymes—Making Chemistry Work in Cells
52. Cellular Currencies of Energy
53. Making ATP—Glycolysis
54. Making ATP—Cellular Respiration
55. Making ATP—The Chemiosmotic Theory
56. Capturing Energy from Sunlight
57. The Reactions of Photosynthesis
58.Resources and Life Histories
59. The Structure of Populations
60. Population Growth
61. What Limits Population Growth?
62. Costs and Benefits of Behavior
63. Altruism and Mate Selection
64. Ecological Interactions Among Species
65. Predators and Competitors
66. Competition and the Ecological Niche
67. Energy in Ecosystems
68. Nutrients in Ecosystems
69. How Predictable Are Ecological Communities?
70. Biogeography
71.Human Population Growth
72.The Human Asteroid
 
Course Image
Biology: The Science of Life
Course No. 1500 (72 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture)
Taught by Stephen Nowicki
Duke University
Ph.D., Cornell University
 $699.95
 $499.95
 $349.95
Should I Buy Audio or Video?
The DVD version of this course contains more than 450 images, including graphs, charts, experiments, diagrams and structures, creatures, and prominent figures in the field of biology. On-screen text includes 500 items. This course also works well in audio formats. Course Guidebooks for all formats include 65 images.

One of the greatest scientific feats of our era is the astonishing progress made in understanding the intricate machinery of life. We are living in the most productive phase so far in this quest, as researchers delve ever deeper into the workings of living systems, turning their discoveries into new medical treatments, improved methods of growing food, and innovative new products.

"The 21st century will be the century of biological science, just as the 20th century was the century of physical science," predicts Professor Stephen Nowicki, an award-winning teacher at Duke University who has specially adapted his acclaimed introductory biology course for The Teaching Company to bring you up to date on one of the most important fields of knowledge of our time.

This intensive, 72-lecture course will give you the background and guidance to explore in depth the fundamental principles of how living things work—principles such as evolution by natural selection, the cellular structure of organisms, the DNA theory of inheritance, and other key ideas that will help you appreciate the marvelous diversity and complexity of life.

Explore Living Systems at All Levels

Make no mistake: this is a challenging course. But the rewards are tremendous. You will explore living systems at all levels, from biological molecules to global ecosystems. Along the way, you will gain insight into some of the most pressing questions facing society:

  • What does it mean to say that the human genome has been "sequenced," and why should we sequence the genomes of other species?
  • How is an organism "genetically modified" or "cloned," and what are the benefits—or potential costs—of doing so?
  • What are "stem cells," and how might they contribute to human health and welfare?
  • Why is HIV/AIDS so difficult to treat?
  • What will happen if vast tracts of tropical rainforest are cut down, and why does it matter that the temperature of the Earth is rising?

In addition, you will discover the mechanisms behind such intriguing phenomena as why children resemble their parents, what causes plants to bend toward light, how memories are stored, why some birds have very long tails, and how life itself began on Earth.

Above all, you will learn how to think about biology, so that in your day-to-day life you will understand the significance and complexities of news stories, medical issues, and public debates, not to mention what is going on in your own garden and in nature all around you.

The Unifying Themes of Biology

Professor Nowicki presents the subject in a conceptual format, emphasizing the importance of broad principles. Facts and details are offered in abundance, but in the context of developing a framework that listeners can absorb.

The course is organized around three major unifying themes:

  • Starting with the theme of "Information and Evolution" (Lectures 1-24), you investigate how information about the structure and organization of living things is found in the DNA molecule, how this information is transmitted and modified, and the implications of these processes for understanding life. One important conclusion of this discussion is that species inevitably change over time; that is, that life evolves.
  • In "Development and Homeostasis" (Lectures 25-48), you consider two related issues for understanding the workings of complex organisms: how single cells (fertilized eggs) proliferate and transform into complex, multicellular organisms, and how the various parts of complex organisms remain coordinated and maintain their integrity in the face of different challenges.
  • In "Energy and Resources" (Lectures 49-72), you learn how living systems obtain the energy and other materials needed to maintain their highly ordered state and the implications of these processes for understanding the organization of biology at all levels of scale. Ultimately this investigation leads into the discipline of ecology and to considerations of energy and resource limitations for the entire planet.

An Innovative Professor

Stephen Nowicki (Ph.D., Cornell University ) is Bass Fellow and Professor of Biology at Duke University, where he also holds appointments in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and in the Neurobiology Department at Duke University Medical Center. A recipient of Duke's Robert B. Cox Distinguished Teaching Award, Professor Nowicki has won widespread recognition for his thorough revision of the university's introductory biology curriculum.

The Great Experiments of Biology

One of the distinctive features of this course is that you learn much of the material through the great experiments that revealed new and unexpected aspects of the living world to science. Among them:

  • Gregor Mendel's discovery of the fundamental principles of inheritance through his work on trait transmission in garden peas in the mid-1800s.
  • Thomas Hunt Morgan's introduction of the fruit fly as a model system for modern genetics in the early 20th century. Morgan's work and that of his many students demonstrated that genes occur on chromosomes.
  • Konrad Lorenz's mid-20th-century work on releasers and fixed action patterns in the behavior of greylag geese and other animals, which helped establish the modern study of animal behavior.
  • Arthur Kornberg's discovery of DNA polymerase in 1958, which helped spark today's revolution in biotechnology and genetic engineering.

Encounter a Wealth of Interesting Information

In your systematic study of biology under Professor Nowicki's guidance, you will encounter a wealth of interesting information and observations, such as:

  • Some cells in a developing organism are pre-programmed to die, a process that is important, for example, in creating the spaces between our fingers and toes.
  • The accumulation of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere following the evolution of photosynthetic bacteria was a disaster of global proportions for most of the organisms that lived before oxygen appeared on the planet.
  • The ability of cells to recognize self from non-self is widespread in animals, even among creatures as simple as sponges. If you take two sponges of the same species and dissociate their cells, then mix those cells, the cells will re-associate with the individual they came from.
  • Some species of moths and butterflies develop into very different looking caterpillars or adults depending on the time of year that they happen to be born. It is the available food source that turns the caterpillar into one form or another.

The diversity of life is indeed remarkable—and so will be your experience with this course. You may not understand everything the first or even the second time you hear it, but "the point isn't to remember the details," says Professor Nowicki. "The point is to understand how the details are processed, how they're analyzed, how biologists come up with these ideas, and how to think about the new information you might encounter in the future.

"My goal in teaching is to have somebody able to open up a newspaper and say, 'I understand why this is an important discovery in biology.'"


Should I Buy Audio or Video?

The DVD version of this course contains more than 450 images, including graphs, charts, experiments, diagrams and structures, creatures, and prominent figures in the field of biology. On-screen text includes 500 items. This course also works well in audio formats. Course Guidebooks for all formats include 65 images.