Borek said:
10 posts ago I wrote that there is no one widely accepted definition of what is alive and what life is. Beat it as long as you want (biologists do it for decades), you will not get to any better conclusion that you agree to disagree.
Good posts Borek.
There isn't a "natural" definition of life, no "law" of life.
Life is a human imposed definition on nature, we need such a definition to have meaningful discourse on
life but that doesn't mean scientists don't understand the limitations of the definition (an an important aspect of defining anything in science is to understand it's limitations).
Biologists typically roll out a definition of life that looks something like;
1. Capable of reproducing with fidelity
2. Capable of converting energy from one form to another
3. Capable of dealing with metabolic waste
4. The cell is the smallest unit
5. Capable of biological evolution
Of course, this means that many "organisms" would fall into a shades of gray kind of deal where our definition of life is concerned. Like certain Mycobacteriums, Chlamydia or viruses.
Probably the most "simple", accurate and inclusive definition of life we could come up with is something capable of evolution (specifically by natural selection as NS is required for adaptive evolution).