BIBLIOGRAPHY 253 



Jones, H. S. Life on Other Worlds (Mentor Books, 1949). Can- 

 vasses the possibility of life on other worlds— a very informative 

 and interesting book with the stamp of the authority of an as- 

 tronomer. Easy to read. 



Lambert. See Finlay-Freundlich, above. 



Laplace. See Gamow, One Tivo Three . . . Infinity, above. 



Lemaitre, Abbe. See Gamow, The Creation of the Universe, above. 



Milne, E. A. See Johnson, above. 



Reiser, O. L. "The Evolution of Cosmologies," Philosophy of Sci- 

 ence, Vol. 19, No. 2 (April, 1952). A brief review of cosmologies, 

 old and new, and an introduction to Reiser's own cyclic-creative 

 universe. Reiser develops a theory which is free from time and 

 space limitations. For more of Reiser see Chap. 16. 



Urey, H. C. The Planets, Their Origin and Development (Yale 

 University Press, 1954). A physical chemist looks at the problem 

 from a different point of view— a planetesimal theory (accumu- 

 lation of dust). Considerable chemistry and mathematics. 



Weizacker, C. See Gamow, The Creation of the Universe, above. 



Whipple, F. L. "The Dust Cloud Hypothesis," Scientific American 

 (May, 1948). 



Chapter 3 



Baldwin, E. J. An hitroduction to Comparative Bioche?nistry 



(Cambridge University Press, 1940). 

 Blum, H. F. Ti??ie's Arrow and Evolution (Princeton University 



Press, 1951). A critical examination of the properties of elements 



found in living substance and of the problem of entropy. 

 Flanagan, Dennis (ed.). The Physics and Chemistry of Life (A 



Scientific American Book, Simon & Schuster, 1956). Explains life 



within the disciplines of the physical sciences. 

 Haldane, J. B. S. "A New Theory of the Past," American Scientist, 



Vol. 33 (July, 1945). Deduces some of the consequences of 



Milne's theory of kinematical relativity. 

 Horowitz, N. H. "On Evolution of Biochemical Synthesis," Pro- 

 ceedings of the Natiofial Academy of Science, Vol. 31 (1945). 

 Jeffreys, H. See Gamow, Biography of the Earth, listed in Chap. 2. 

 Jerome, Alexander. Life, Its Nature and Origin (Reinhold, 1948). 

 Oparin, a. L The Origin of Life (Macmillan, 1938; Dover, 1953). 

 Schrodinger, Erwin. What is Life? (Macmillan, 1945). A very 



thought-provoking review and analysis of the problem of life 



by an atomic physicist. 



