James N. Gardner, B.A. (Yale Scholar of the House), J.D.
James N. Gardner, B.A. (Yale Scholar of the House), J.D. is a widely
published complexity theorist whose book
Biocosm: The New Scientific Theory of Evolution : Intelligent Life Is the
Architect of the Universe has received praise from many top
scientists.
Lord Martin Rees, UK Astronomer Royal, author of
Our Final Hour: A Scientist’s Warning: How Terror, Error, and
Environmental Disaster Threaten Humankind’s Future In This
Century — On
Earth and Beyond and winner
of the 2001 Gruber Prize in Cosmology says Biocosm is
A fascinating and poetic synthesis of current ideas on the emergence of our biofriendly cosmos and its destiny. James Gardner’s Selfish Biocosm hypothesis envisions a novel perspective on humankind’s role in the universe.
Paul Davies, Professor of Natural Philosophy in the Australian Center for Astrobiology, author of How to Build a Time Machine, The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life, The Cosmic Blueprint: New Discoveries in Nature’s Creative Ability to Order the Universe, and other popular science books says
James Gardner tackles the biggest of the Big Questions head on: Why is the universe bio-friendly? This stunning fact cannot be shrugged aside as an incidental quirk of nature, but deserves a deep and satisfying explanation. Gardner skillfully interweaves some of the most provocative ideas at the forefront of science to outline a possible explanation — and how extraordinary his explanation turns out to be!
Seth Shostak, Senior Astronomer, SETI Institute says
James Gardner carefully reviews all the best ideas on how to understand the cosmos’s apparent biological imperative and then puts forth a new, and strikingly dramatic, suggestion of his own, one that makes use of the exciting field of complexity science. He is well qualified to do this, with training in theoretical biology and philosophy, and an impressive trail of published, scholarly work in complexity theory. His arguments are lucid, and his prose is elegant and engaging. But what will most strike the reader of this book is the fact that Gardner is not going after small fish. The subject he is wrestling with is as large, as important, as they come: What is the purpose of our universe and the life it has spawned? He tells us how the fact that the universe was ‘made for life’ can be ultimately understood by science and need not forever be the domain of theology or metaphysics.
Ever since Newton, scientists have tried to understand existence by discovering its underlying rules. The result has been a massive edifice of natural law, and biology has been seen as a consequence of the universe’s construction, rather than an instigator. Only on Earth’s surface, where life has molded the seas, the continents, and even the atmosphere, is biology thought to have had an important role in shaping physical conditions — the so-called Gaia hypothesis. But Gardner has taken Gaia to its furthest conceivable magnitude: extending the role and influence of life to the stars and beyond.
There is little doubt that his ideas will change yours.
Jim’s peer-reviewed articles and scientific papers have
appeared in prestigious scientific journals, including Complexity (the journal of
the
Santa Fe Institute),
Acta Astronautica (the journal of the
International Academy of Astronautics), and the
Journal of the British Interplanetary Society. He has also written popular articles for
Wired
magazine,
Nature Biotechnology, The Wall Street Journal, and World Link (the
magazine of the World Economic Forum).
He is a graduate of Yale College and the Yale Law School. As an
undergraduate at Yale, he studied philosophy and theoretical biology and
was named, on the basis of academic accomplishment, a Scholar of the
House. His Scholar of the House thesis examined the coevolution of form
and content in 20th Century existential philosophy and was based in part
on a series of personal interviews he conducted of Jean-Paul Sartre in
Paris. At Yale College, Gardner served as Feature Editor of Yale
Scientific Magazine and drama critic for the Yale Daily News. During this
period, he also authored front page and editorial page feature stories
for The Wall Street Journal.
At Yale Law School, Jim served as Article Editor of the Yale Law
Journal. Following graduation, he served as a law clerk for Associate
Justice Potter Stewart on the United States Supreme Court during the 1975
October Term. Following his Supreme Court clerkship, He moved to
Oregon and was elected to the Oregon State Senate in 1978. During his
tenure as an Oregon State Senator, he was consistently rated as the
outstanding member of the Senate in surveys conducted by The Oregonian
newspaper.
In addition to his scientific pursuits, Jim serves a partner in a
flourishing law and government affairs firm which he cofounded with his
wife Lynda Nelson Gardner. His clients include the Pharmaceutical
Research and Manufacturers of America, Microsoft, Hertz, Avis, Kraft,
Abbott Labs, and the Association of American Publishers. He also serves
as chief freelance reviewer of popular science books for The Sunday
Oregonian.
His latest book is
The Intelligent Universe: AI, ET, and the Emerging Mind of the
Cosmos.