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Reviews for Skeletal Biology and Medicine: Aspects of Bone Morphogenesis and Remodeling

 Skeletal Biology and Medicine magazine reviews

The average rating for Skeletal Biology and Medicine: Aspects of Bone Morphogenesis and Remodeling based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2011-01-28 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars Alton Willoughby
A fantastic overview of women's experiences of the HIV/AIDS epidemic from a more global perspective. Although slightly dated, still well worth reading.
Review # 2 was written on 2017-03-24 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars Amanda Urban
[ The good: - bold theorizing! But testable and falsifiable, so it has more merit than technically savvy sci-fi. (still, all it changes is the mechanism. It doesn't address the selection pressures, why intelligence, or many of the objections he raises to a darwinian account) - many important and fascinating experiments are described - even if you don't buy his theory you will learn a lot of interesting facts about genetics and epigenetics, the technical level is high and, especially in the last couple of parts, very satisfying. - Fills a niche, not a lot of interesting material on the subject that's available to the general reader. The bad: - didn't make it clear to me why his evolutionary stories were more plausible and useful than all the ones he dismisses (even tho I find his exercises in making alternate accounts pedagogically useful) - Apparently the discovery of fire and heat-preparation of food was not an event worth mentioning, even tho this is interpreted as causing the shortening of our intestines which lead to much better energy utilization (the intestines need a lot of energy to do their work), freeing up resources for a power-hungry organ like the brain - although he did make a point of the importance of brain plasticity, he never really addresses the long developmental time of human children and the extent of dendritic pruning that takes place during this period. Having a longer window for critical and sensitive periods sounds like an important factor in how much culture can change an organism. - his discussion of how traits like intelligence or musicality (or indeed a brain region specific to written language) was useless to our pre-historic forefathers wasn't entirely convincing (what good is a cubic-root to a caveman? I'm not sure, but pattern recognition and being able to think and manipulate abstractions in some capacity sounds like it could be useful? It does sound like it's a subject that has been covered by others, so I should perhaps not hold it against him for not dedicating more time to the subject). (hide spoiler)]


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