How Will We Define Life if Our Understanding Continues to Evolve?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the evolving definitions of life in light of new discoveries in extreme environments and the implications for our understanding of what constitutes life. Participants explore theoretical frameworks, necessary conditions for life, and the role of energy and entropy in biological processes.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that our definition of life may need to adapt as we discover organisms in unexpected environments, questioning the necessity of liquid water and solid materials for life.
  • Others argue that our definitions remain stable, as we recognize new organisms based on existing criteria, although the debate over what constitutes life, such as the status of viruses, continues.
  • A participant suggests that a liquid environment with sufficient activity and elemental variety, combined with time, may be essential for life.
  • Another participant emphasizes that not just any liquid will suffice and highlights the uncertainty surrounding the requirements for abiogenesis.
  • Some discuss the need for energy input and low entropy conditions, proposing that the right chemical environment and time could be critical for life to emerge.
  • Experiments like the Miller-Urey experiment are mentioned as evidence that certain biomolecules can form under primordial conditions, but the role of geological factors is also considered.
  • A participant shares a link to a thermodynamics perspective on life, which is acknowledged as speculative but potentially valuable for further exploration.
  • Concerns are raised about the implications of viewing life as a natural process of entropy, with some expressing a sense of melancholy about this perspective.
  • Questions arise regarding how to experimentally test the theories being discussed, particularly in relation to energy dissipation and replication rates in cells.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the definition of life and its requirements, with no consensus reached. The discussion includes both speculative ideas and established theories, highlighting ongoing debates and uncertainties.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the lack of a strict definition of life, the dependence on specific conditions for abiogenesis, and the unresolved nature of various hypotheses regarding the origins of life.

binbots
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Our definition of life keeps changing as we discover living things in places we did not think life could exist. My question is how would we define life if this trend continues? As of now we believe all living things need liquid water. But we may find organism living in any kind of liquid. But is a liquid even necessary? Is solid material needed for life to anchor on? I am thinking of life in the most optimistic way and wondering how to define it. Could in theory life take hold anywhere there is a slow exchange of energy over a long period of time?
 
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Our definition of life doesn't really change when we find organisms living in places we didn't think they could, on the contrary we recognise them because of our definitions. As we understand it water is necessary for life but there has been speculative work on using other liquids as a solvent. I doubt any non liquid media could give rise to life.

There is no strict definition of life and there is constant debate regarding things like viruses and if they should count as alive. The broad consensus is listed here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life#Definitions
 
So a liquid environment which has a lot of activity (but not to much) and a good variety of elements and giving enough time may be all that is needed?
 
Thanks for the link :) It seems life has a lot of limitations chemically. But putting the chemical soup aside for a second what else is a necessity? Life needs energy and it gets this energy from low entropy systems and contributes to the over all increase of entropy. So is the right chemical soup, a low entropy environment, and time may be all that is needed?
 
You'd need the right energy input at the right time with the right composition of elements, but we don't know for sure. Experiments like the Miller-Urey experiment showed that you could get certain biomolecules to form under "primordial" conditions. However there are theories that geology matters as well, IIRC there is speculation that pores in rocks aided in the formation of the first cellular structures.
 
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Thank you. That article seems to be exactly what I am looking for.
 
No problem. Keep in mind that while many people appreciate England's approach, it's still speculative. But imo, it's worth testing experimentally.
 
  • #10
If his approach is not right I bet it is pretty close. Much how we use to think we were at the center of the universe, we also think life is something special. But we will eventually find out that it is just a natural process of entropy. Kinda of depressing.
 
  • #11
How would this be tested. I did not find anything about that?
 
  • #12
binbots said:
How would this be tested. I did not find anything about that?

Prentiss, who runs an experimental biophysics lab at Harvard, says England’s theory could be tested by comparing cells with different mutations and looking for a correlation between the amount of energy the cells dissipate and their replication rates. “One has to be careful because any mutation might do many things,” she said. “But if one kept doing many of these experiments on different systems and if [dissipation and replication success] are indeed correlated, that would suggest this is the correct organizing principle.”
 
  • #13
"... that would suggest this is the correct organizing principle.” Perhaps this would be better read as "...that would suggest this is the correct an organizing principle.”
 

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