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Tibor Gánti

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Nationality
  
Hungarian

Fields
  
Biochemistry


Known for
  
Chemoton model

Name
  
Tibor Ganti

Born
  
10 September 1933 Vac, Hungary (
1933-09-10
)

Died
  
15 April 2009(2009-04-15) (aged 75) Nagymaros, Hungary

Institutions
  
University of Godollo Jozsef Attila University Eotvos Lorand University

Alma mater
  
Technical University of Budapest

Tibor Gánti (10 September 1933 – 15 April 2009) was a Hungarian theoretical biologist and biochemist, who is best known for the chemoton, a model for defining the minimal nature of life. He taught industrial biochemistry at Eötvös University, and theoretical biology at University of Gödöllő, József Attila University and Eötvös University.

Contents

Early life and education

Tibor Gánti worked as laboratory assistant at the Bacteriological Laboratory, Factory of Canned Food at Dunakeszi from 1951-1952. He then moved to Photochemical Research Institute of Vác in 1953-1954. From 1958 to 1965 he was the Head of Yeast Laboratory, Yeast Factory, Budapest. In the meantime he completed a Diploma in Chemical Engineering from the Technical University of Budapest in 1958, and a Dr.techn. (PhD) in 1962. Between 1965 and 1974 he was the Head of Biochemical Department at the REANAL Factory of Laboratory Chemicals in Budapest. He was honoured a doctorate in biological science by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1980.

Academic career

Gánti joined 1968-1972 Eötvös University as a guest lecturer of industrial biochemistry in 1968. In 1974 he became a guest lecturer of the theoretical biology at the University of Gödöllô. Between 1975 and 1979 he taught theoretical biology at József Attila University, Szeged. He became guest professor of the theoretical biology at Eötvös University in 1978 up to 1999.

Chemoton

Gánti made himself a forefront scientist in 1971 by introducing a theory called chemoton. According to the chemoton model, life should basically but necessarily have an autocatalytic subsystem consisting of metabolism and a replication process, and a membrane enclosing these functions. It may be the most significant contribution to theoretical biology for understanding the chemical basis and origin of life as it provides a philosophy of evolutionary units.

Political career

Gánti founded the Alliance for the Protection of Nature and Society (TTVSZ) which received 0.03 percent of the votes and won no seats in the 1990 parliamentary election. He ran as a candidate on the national list of the National Democratic Alliance in the 1994 parliamentary election, but did not obtain a mandate.

Awards

  • 1982 Herman Otto prize
  • 1986 MTESz prize
  • 1989 Pro Natura medal
  • Publications

  • Forradalom az élet kutatásában (1966), Gondolat, Budapest
  • Az élet princípiuma (1971), Gondolat, Budapest
  • A chemoton–elmélet alapjai (1974), Fizikai Szemle.
  • A Theory of Biochemical Supersystems and Its Application to Problems of Natural and Artificial Biogenesis (1979), Akadémiai, Budapest–University Park Press, Baltimore, ISBN 978-0839114116
  • Chemotonelmélet I. A fluid automaták elméleti alapjai (1984), OMIKK, Budapest
  • The Principle of Life (1987), OMIKK, Budapest
  • Chemotonelmélet II. Az élő rendszerek elmélete (1989), OMIKK, Budapest
  • The Principles of Life (2003), Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780198507260
  • Chemoton Theory. Vol. I. Theory of Fluid Machineries (2003), Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York
  • Chemoton Theory. Vol. II. Theory of Living Systems (2003), Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York, ISBN 9780306477850
  • References

    Tibor Gánti Wikipedia