The Fermi paradox is specifically about advanced life able to make contact with us. This is different from the origin of life, but life originating (once at least) is a condition that enables any higher life forms.
This is how I think about this group of issues:
- origin of life (an emergent event, based on a special set of geochemical conditions (I have my favorite scenarios)). This creates simple life forms, like prokaryotes - no nucleus, limited chemical power and genetics). This has happened at least once on earth, possibly more.
- Complex single celled life (another emergent event based on two different cells combining to form a single cell like a eukaryotic cell with a nucleus, mitochondria and bunch of other useful stuff). This has happened several times on earth (mitochondria, chloroplasts, and at least two for other inclusions that provide the ability to process other chemical energy sources (I have previously made some posts on these). However, it took ~2 billion years for that to happen (mitochondria and chloroplasts). It required to two different original cell types and the right environment to favor the results of such a combination.
- Multicellular life made of complex (eukaryote-like) cells. (Emergent event based on having the single cells). Multicellularity has happened many times on earth. There are even multicellular prokaryotes. ITs an easy quick thing.
- Intelligence, tool use and developing socially accumulated knowledge and space travel or whatever Fermi was talking about. Also an emergent event. Likelihood and the effect of other other factors (like possibly self-nuking) that could affect it arising.
Each of these steps (especially the origin of life) could actually be a fairly tightly clustered series of emergent events that lead to a self-sufficient chemical system capable of reproduction in its specific environment. They might then eventually produce populations of reproducing entities, competing for the same set of resources. Several emergent steps in there.
Another issue is how you define life. This is surprisingly an issue of contention. Personally I like to consider autopoietic chemical systems as a good description of life. Autopoietic systems are systems able to make more of their own parts. This allows them to replace worn-out or used-up parts. If the parts production exceeds the requirements of the replacement needs, extra parts can be made and the system can grow in size. In chemical systems, the parts are chemicals. Biophysically, when membrane bound sphere-like entities get too big, they tend to separate into two or more smaller sphere-like entities. Potentially reproduction. This can lead to reproducing populations competing for the same resources.
phyzguy said:
The thing to remember is that, if new life formed today on Earth, it would get eaten very quickly. So you can't conclude that life only formed once on Earth.
PeroK said:
That sounds like a personal theory to me!
I don't think this is a personal theory. Its just stuff many physicists are not aware of. Its an obvious conclusion from the niche exclusion principle in ecology. (This is also the basis for the competition for resources among different organisms.) If something is using a set of resources, it will presumably become increasingly more efficient at it until physical limits are reached.I think a lot of biology captures something like 95% of the energy it intakes. Life forms just starting out will not be nearly as efficient and will be, quite predictably, out competed. Then any new organism in conflict with established ones for using the same resources, will have to compete for the resources. Unless it could find an alternative niche they can make a living in (as a successful autopoietic system), they will go extinct.
Not only could the new life forms be eaten by earlier evolved guys, but they would also have to out compete them for resources.
In non-scientific and most scientific communications, just discussing life without really defining what you are talking about usually works out fine. However, when talking about things near the boundary between life and not-life, the lack of a commonly accepted definition results in problematic cases. The term is not well suited to refine scientific questions. I would argue that the problems break down based on the emergent events needed to take them to the next stage toward being a complete autopoietic chemical system.
Some traditional examples of problematic cases include:
- mules: metabolically alive, can not reproduce. Not alive by some definitions.
- non-reproductive castes of social insects (ants and bees): same issues.
- fire: a reproducing chemical reaction (dependent on environmental fuel), no inheritance (thus no evolution) other than the initial spark (characteristics completely dependent on the fuel and oxidizer), can reproduce by slitting the fire in two.
With respect to the issue of
how many origins of life, this is from a
post I made relevant to this in another thread. Important points are summed up in this picture:
LUCE = Last Universal Common Ancestor
LBCA = Last Bacterial Common Ancestor
LACA = Last Archeal Common Ancestor
red lines = horizontal gene transfer between different lineages.
Thick lines LUCA and its derivatives.
Carl Woese thought that before LUCA there could have been many beginnings of life and several of them could have combined to produce a more empowered chemical entity. Producing an anastomosing or reticulate lineage.
Life arising in alkaline hydrothermal vents is probably the dominant scenario for how life on Earth arose. Currently, this mostly happens in locations of ocean floor spreading, but away from magmatic heat sources. They rely on the more gentle heat of serpentinization (weathering of basalt) reactions to drive slow flows of chemically laden water.
When the earth first formed a solid surface with water on top, there were no continents and perhaps some volcanoes emerging from the oceans. All the rest of the surface area of the earth would have been potential sites for serpentinization to occur. This view makes more than one beginning of life not unreasonable.
Ken Fabian said:
I suspect we will identify the essential chemical pathways amongst the possible pathways within mixtures of the kinds of chemicals we could expect to occur naturally without biology and under the conditions we expect to have existed - by modeling rather than experiment.
Something like this is a common proposal in abiogenetic hypotheses.
Specifically at alkaline hydrothermal vents uprising chemical dissolved in the flows can react with natural minerals (like FeS crystals) to produce chemicals found int the Krebs cycle. This production can be measured today. The Krebs cycle is a central hub of earthly biochemistry. I is one or two steps from producing several amino acids and some lipids. Several of today's Krebs cycle enzymes have FeS at their active sites.