rossmc Posted September 14, 2005 Posted September 14, 2005 Is anyone out there able to give me a brief summary of the current theories of the origin of life?
BobbyJoeCool Posted September 14, 2005 Posted September 14, 2005 if you mean abiogenesis Amino Acids (ond other things) come together to form a protien. (I'm not sure if RNA is required for that to happen.) Protien forms DNA, which then repicates itself (and more protiens) to form the first cell. Evolution takes over from there.
rossmc Posted September 14, 2005 Author Posted September 14, 2005 There are various areas of research. RNA theories, clay theories, panspermia etc. I just wanted a brief synopsis of each and where it currently stands.
Ophiolite Posted September 14, 2005 Posted September 14, 2005 It is probably safe to say that no consensus has been reached yet in this area of research. Panspermia has undoubtedly received a boost from the variety and complexity of organic compounds detected in interstellar gas clouds, in meteorites and on comets. No one would seriously doubt that cometary impact during the heavy bombardment phase contributed significantly to pre-biotic chemistry. By that same token the emergence of life soon after, or possibly during, this phase favours an extra-terrestrial origin. Hypotheses focusing on the roles of crystal structure, such as Cairns-Smith clay progenitor, are plausible, well argued, but wholly lacking in evidence. The Oparin-Haldane hypothesis of the primordial soup has been largely discarded in favour of the emergence of autotrophs in subterranean locales, safe from the repeated sterilisation of large impact events. The 'RNA World' approach seems to be still popular (I don't think anyone is still maintaining DNA was the first replicating molecule), but it has significant problems. I lean towards self-replicating polypeptides and self-catalysing metabolic loops, with cellulat bodies emerging from the tendency for lipds to form spherical mebranes in water. i.e. the first cells were almost certainly a symbiotic combination of several chemical systems that together merited the term life. I'd be happy to address any specific questions you have, but I don't want (and I don't think you want) a twenty five page essay on the subject.
ydoaPs Posted September 14, 2005 Posted September 14, 2005 i'm surprised no IDiots have showed up yet
mezarashi Posted September 14, 2005 Posted September 14, 2005 i'm surprised no IDiots have showed up yet Shall I represent the underrepresented then?
BobbyJoeCool Posted September 15, 2005 Posted September 15, 2005 i'm surprised no IDiots have showed up yet And what about me?
Kleptin Posted September 16, 2005 Posted September 16, 2005 There's something that I would like clarified... I know that there have been attempts to recreate cell-like...things...(They aren;t actually living right?) And that they all exhibit some traits that mimic life processes. I just wanted to know if anyone has any theories on how those non-living things (as we categorize them) crossed the line to living things. I mean, there has to be a cutoff point somewhere right? And if not one, at least a distinct set of traits that show that something is alive?
LucidDreamer Posted September 17, 2005 Posted September 17, 2005 There's something that I would like clarified... I know that there have been attempts to recreate cell-like...things...(They aren;t actually living right?) And that they all exhibit some traits that mimic life processes. I just wanted to know if anyone has any theories on how those non-living things (as we categorize them) crossed the line to living things. I mean' date=' there has to be a cutoff point somewhere right? And if not one, at least a distinct set of traits that show that something is alive?[/quote'] Metabolism Ability to reproduce Response to stimulus These are three criteria that many biologists believe that something must have to be alive, however the definition of life is controversial and many biologists add more criteria to the three mentioned above.
Ophiolite Posted September 17, 2005 Posted September 17, 2005 My opinion is that when we have a far more detailed understanding of the probable pathways through which life arose we will then have to recognise that the distinction between living and non-living has little meaning at a certain level. There is a gradation in complexity between the two states and where we choose to draw the line is likely to be arbritary and misleading. (It will, however, provide the material for countless Ph.D. dissertations and an impressive number of academic careers.)
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now