Chemical Evolution of Self-Replicating Molecules Observed In a Lab (nature.com) 172
New submitter n0w4k writes: Researchers at the University of Groningen have developed a self-replicating system able to not only pass hereditary information from one generation to another, but also mutate (non-paywalled link to the paper). It is a crucial step towards Darwinian evolution of abiotic species and artificial life. According to the authors and perhaps somewhat counterintuitively, in order to fully reach this goal, a death mechanism needs to be implemented in the system. Otherwise new species can only form but not disappear.
Self-replicating chemical systems have been widely studied before; some were even able to mutate. However, this discovery provides the first example of mutating replicators which are fully artificial.
Full disclosure: I am one of the co-authors; you can ask me if you have some specific questions or suggestions — maybe they can be implemented in the lab!
Self-replicating chemical systems have been widely studied before; some were even able to mutate. However, this discovery provides the first example of mutating replicators which are fully artificial.
Full disclosure: I am one of the co-authors; you can ask me if you have some specific questions or suggestions — maybe they can be implemented in the lab!
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I don't know where God is , but I do know the Devil is in the details with this sort of thing.
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Where is your god now?
Down at the 7-11, enjoying a Big Gulp
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Where is your god now?
In a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
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Obviously, if we're created in God's image then it is only natural that we'd be both inclined to and able to "play God".
However, I think the consensus among Christians is that while we're made in God's image we should in no way act in a Godlike (or was that Godly) manner, particularly when it comes to morality or ability.
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Catholic church has had the evolution "problem" nixed for about a century. Try to keep up.
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Agnostic here. IMHO we really have no way to think or talk about the origin problem. We can insert some placeholder, that semantically answers the question (like God started it all, or time goes back infinitely, or time started at the big bang), but ontologically, we still got nothin'. How do we make sense of a beginning with no previous moment ? Or an infinitely backward extending line of time ? Go ahead and act like the problem is resolved, but it is still an open question. And this is a problem because I have a belief that something, rather than nothing, exists, which raises these nasty origin questions.
Glad to see that someone understands what agnostic really means (inability to know). It's also encouraging to see someone who is able to distinguish evolution (genetic change within a population), speciation (evolution to the point that the population is no longer part of the same species), and the origin of life.
Humans are imperfect and have a finite understanding. It is (nearly) impossible for us to come up with the absolute origin of time, so we choose arbitrary epochs (big bang theory, founding of a cit
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It's also encouraging to see someone who is able to distinguish evolution (genetic change within a population), speciation (evolution to the point that the population is no longer part of the same species)
Why would you distinguish evolution from speciation in this way, especially since your own definition of speciation considers it a subset of evolution and not a separate process? Speciation is simply one part of the evolutionary process, not separate from it. Over time evolutionary changes are categorized as cladogenesis (splitting into a new species) or anagenesis (evolution without speciation taking place), but both types of classifications are a part of overall evolutionary theory.
Your comment has a slig
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Agnostic here. IMHO we really have no way to think or talk about the origin problem. We can insert some placeholder, that semantically answers the question (like God started it all, or time goes back infinitely, or time started at the big bang), but ontologically, we still got nothin'. How do we make sense of a beginning with no previous moment ? Or an infinitely backward extending line of time ? Go ahead and act like the problem is resolved, but it is still an open question. And this is a problem because I have a belief that something, rather than nothing, exists, which raises these nasty origin questions.
Just because we will probably never have a definitive answer does not mean you cannot have reasoned discussions on the topic. First we can come to an agreement that either something has always existed, or something sprung up from nothingness. One of those has to be true as far as I can tell. So this is something almost everyone can agree on.
Then everyone needs to refrain from making the mistake that all possibilities are equally likely simply because we don't know which is correct. That way arguments don't
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We can insert some placeholder, that semantically answers the question (like God started it all, or time goes back infinitely, or time started at the big bang), but ontologically, we still got nothin'. How do we make sense of a beginning with no previous moment ? Or an infinitely backward extending line of time ? Go ahead and act like the problem is resolved, but it is still an open question.
Easy, just let it wrap around. :-)
And say: history repeats itself.
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But just saying you don't know doesn't absolve you of taking a stance on the matter.
If I don't make a claim or take a stance, how would you know ? Let's say I wake up in a strange room that is on fire, with a door to the left and a door to the right. As a practical matter I choose the door on the left, but at no time do I make a claim that it is in fact the exit. Just a practical decision, no claim to truth. While you will find me making certain practical decisions, you won't often hear me announcing truth claims.
Even if you answer this with "I'm not sure", this is essentially the same as saying "they have similar possibilities of being correct."
Sorry, I don't agree, the second part there would constitute a claim.
my brother is 1 millimeter tall or 6 feet tall,
T
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I'm not the person you're arguing against, but yes, I positively make the claim that "I don't know" is not a silly stance. This is a thing that nobody knows objectively to measures of absolute proof, and where there is, in fact, widespread worldwide disagreement over time and space (even religious folk don't always have a sentient creator; major religions also cover the ideas of an infinite regress of time, of a finite but circular progression of time, and the idea of a non-sapient beginning). When people
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We have no clue how to solve the ontological problem, and we aren't going to find a scientific way to address it. Given that, it makes sense to work on things like biological genesis and cosmological beginnings.
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For instance if I asked you if it was more likely that my brother is 1 millimeter tall or 6 feet tall, answer "I'm not sure" is making the claim each are at least similarly likely.... So either you make the claim that one side is more likely, or you make the claim they are similarly likely. Those are all claims which require a defense just as much as someone who has faith or is a non-believer.
There is another option: you can choose not to answer the question. There is no need to take a position (even a non-committal one like "not sure") when the answer has no impact on your life. The proper response to the question "is it more likely than not that there are invisible pink unicorns hiding in my back yard" is not "yes", "no", or "not sure", but rather "who cares?".
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Not knowing the likelihoods is not the same as claiming that the likelihoods are equal.
If you present me with a biased coin that you've made, I don't know whether when we toss it, it is more likely to come up heads, or more likely to come up tails. Pointing that out doesn't mean that I think they're both equally likely, just that I have no way of knowing at this stage which is more likely. Notable points:
1. There is a correct answer.
2. You know what it is.
3. I don't know what it is.
4. I don't believe that t
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You live in sort of a middle scale, where both quantum effects and relativistic effects are almost imperceptible to our senses. (Okay, black-body radiation has only a quantum interpretation, but before the nineteenth century nobody had realized it needed another explanation.) Your intuition is based on your experience, and possibly experiences of your ancestors that changed their likelihood of breeding. This means that your intuition is a very bad guide in quantum physics or relativity.
There have been
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So God created life in laboratory experiments designed to demonstrate naturalistic pathways from prebiotic to biotic states?
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Okay, so you saw an argument where one side was the Devil, and you were like, "man, that guy could use an advocate."
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Somewhat of a tangent, but related: part of the reason that groups like Daesh persecute the Yazidi people is that they think that they're devil worshipers, and part of the reason that they do is their Garden of Eden story. You know the story of Satan's fall - that God created man and told all of the angels to bow down to him, but Lucifer was to prideful and refused, and as punishment he was cast from heaven. Well, it's subverted in the Yazidi religion. They don't have a Satan, but they have a number of ma
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I knew that about Lucifer; I was always told that he'd been called that before the Fall because he brought God's light, but I hadn't heard that it was probably actually talking about the King of Babylon. Thanks for the info!
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Yep - here's the whole passage that introduced the name in the Vulgate - Isaiah 14:
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Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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You forgot that is just the earth, what about every other planets? You might say well it happened on earth, but that really that is just survivor bias. If it happened on mars we would be saying what are the chances of it happening on mars. Kind of like saying why is the right key always the last one I check.
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The probabilistic constraint on a dependent sequence of events occurring is the step with the -lowest- probability.
I wouldn't be gauging this by the probability of a molecular arrangement occurring out of millions of "attempts", I'd be looking at the probability of the context existing to make the attempts possible. Which currently stands at a success rate of one out of one attempt--i.e., the Big Bang. Alternate hypothetical models allowing for more "attempts" have no more hard empirical basis than a the
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There you go then, the probability of life arising spontaneously is 100%.
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The probability of anything is 100% if you presume your determining conditions up-front.
The probability that of all possible physical laws and initial conditions, that life-enabling ones would be the first and only known "random" occurrence, is certainly not 100%.
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1/1 = 100% :)
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We have a lot of magic numbers that mean things, and no idea how many of them relate to each other. If we were to change just one of those magic numbers, we'd likely make the Universe uninhabitable for intelligent life (and very possibly any life). If we start finding relations between these magic numbers, we come up with constraints, and at some point we may discover that all those numbers have to have values that support intelligent life. It may be that the laws of physics mean that any Universe that'
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There's a slippery assumption creeping in there. You're assuming that there is only one way of having "life". We don't know that. We do know that the number of ways of producing the behaviours that we describe is not less than 1, but that's not the same thing.
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He breathed life into the chemical bits to make you.
And I thought _I_ had bad breath!
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Movie plot? (Score:5, Funny)
I would ask you to please don't let it get out of the lab.
You will probably reply: Bwahahahaha!
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Send it to Mars and Europa. See what happens...
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Well, yes. A grotesque human-eating blob might be an improvement on the current crop of candidates. What's its position on the TPP?
Impressive (Score:2)
How do I read an "Enhanced" PDF? (Score:2)
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It works in Firefox.
Now that's what I call a death mechanism :D
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Yes, nice article - now that we're more or less back on topic.
One question. If I understand the first few paragraphs (unlikely) then the major difference between your system and the quasi species model is that your system does not have a death mechanism (no, I'm not going there). But these are aormatic cyclic molecules that I would not think would be particularly stable. Would not just random degradation of the replicators imply death to the 'organism' or would that just be like cooking your hamburger?
Counterintuitively? (Score:3)
I don't get it... To me death is an obvious part of the life cycle, which is the base for evolution. What way of thinking can bring you to the point where you think evolution is possible without death?
Re:Counterintuitively? (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, you can have death of the original caused by the evolved next generation.
Re:Counterintuitively? (Score:5, Interesting)
The idea of reducing with Darwinian evolution to chemical kinetics (replication and destruction of replicators) has been nicely outlined by Addy Pross, who introduced the concept of dynamic kinetic stability [jsystchem.com]:
dX/dt = kMX - gX,
where X is the concentration of the replicator, M is the concentration of 'food' and k and g are the rate constants (efficiencies) for the replication and destruction processes.
So far we only got the first part of the equation and colleagues from the lab got some promising results implementing the second part.
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To me it's also obvious, but judging from the conversations with colleagues in the field (who are chemists, not evolutionary biologists), destruction of replicators is generally neglected. The challenge has been to just make molecules which can replicate and it is even more difficult to make them evolve because you need at least one bit of information that can assume 0 or 1 state, translated into chemical structures. Such error-prone replication process is enough to generate diversity of replicators but without extinction, the only selection pressure is on the replication efficiency and not survival.
This has also been brought up as a critique of cosmological natural selection.
Exploration exploitation (Score:2)
In optimization theory another way to look at diversification and death is the trade in algorithms between exploitation and exploration of a potential surface for local minima. Consider the 3-armed bandit problem where one of the slot machines has a better payoff ratio and one has a worse. Your initial search of a few pulls gives you a crude guess about which is the best and if you are right then it's a waste of resources to pull the lesser bandit arms in the name of exploring further. You should exploit
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... what follows may or may not be true. However, Nowak and colleagues are chemists at the bench and find it very difficult to simultaneously have reducing conditions in their bucket ("reaction vessel") to promote separation of their macromolecules into monomers ("food") and to have oxidising conditions to promote assembly of monomers into macromolecules under the influence of the existing macromolecules.
This is an operational constraint, not a theoretical one.
In a practical system,
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I'm really not sure why the submitter decided to describe it as counterintuitive, but I did find it interesting that, technically, it may be possible to have a form of proto-life that evolves by mutating during replication and does not die. But if that happens, evolution ends as soon as all available space is taken up. It kind of makes me wonder whether it's possible that there are dead-end planets in the universe where that did, indeed happen. And what the odds would then be of that sort of life startin
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Bacteria are effectively immortal; in that they just divide and divide and divide.
That being said, as environmental pressures increase, one would assume that self-replicating units of this nature would soon evolve the ability to gain nutrients from its neighboring proto-life, and you now have a predator-prey situation. Being eaten or being killed by some eternal factor is how bacteria and archaea die. You're applying a concept that mainly applies to multicellular organisms.
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No they're not. They reproduce, but with a non-zero copying error rate. After separation, the two daughter bacteria from a single parent bacterium are different from each other, and both from their parent. They might be the three most closely related organisms on the planet (even if one of them no longer exists, except as a recorded genome), but the odds are high that none of the genomes will be identical.
In computing, we like to think that the error rate on digital copyin
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Chemical reactions like that need some form of energy input, and likely some chemical input. Self-replication will require an environment with the necessary parts (atoms or smaller molecules) available. Deprive the reaction of these, and it can't continue. The molecules might be fine still, and so no more dead than they were while breeding, but they're going to look awful dead, even if they will spring right back into operation with the correct inputs. (That is not dead which can eternal lie / And with
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A real world system would be in an environment which did this. Here the chemists have to put their baby to the tit, and wipe it's arse. You could say, they're taking "baby steps".
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Sorry, but you've hit 3 problems.
First, your definition is twice flawed. It infers that your definition is correct without proof. And your definition requires death, when evolution is a process of transition of traits in organisms. Death is a coincidence, but neither causal nor integral to that transition.
Your question is equally flawed: questioning research only because the research focuses on a stage, because it doesn't include all stages.
Last item first: when we study something, science allows focusing
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I wouldn't say death is a prerequisite. "Competition for quantity" may be effective in driving evolution also. Those variations that are the most common will be the more efficient or prolific replicators, and that's why they are more common.
Mutations that produce faster replicators will be more common, creating a feedback mechanism to "reward" them, where the reward is quantity of existence rather than mere survival.
If you have
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Humanity's entire success is based on us figuring out how to do just that. Our behaviour has an instinctual aspect but is mostly dictated by surrounding society, and can be "updated" within our lifetime. Death became obsolete as soon as nature invented evolutionary Turing machines. We can only hope it'll become nonexistent, too.
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Question (Score:2)
n0w4k, first of all: congrats to you and your co-authors on this brilliant achievement ! Second: have you guys thought of the minimal amount of information necessary to represent each of the "elements" (or, as I'd rather say, "individuals") of your system ? I am very bad at chemistry, but not that bad as a programmer ;-) I'd actually love to try and replicate your experiment with pure information. Of course, this is only an idea. One would prolly also need to (en)code the system's environment...
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Of course, but an accurate digital simulation of the chemical experiment might be interesting to try variations on the chemistry without having to synthesize it.
What I wonder is how much soup they are cooking, digital simulations - even on machines with 128GB of RAM tend to be pretty limited in their quantity of elements simulated. 100GB of RAM might simulate a couple of drops full of replicating chemicals.
In the digital simulations I've done, fragmentation of the world into varying environments seemed to
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Yes, we thought of that and we have been collaborating with physicists/programmers who are interested in chemical kinetics from the origins of life perspective. And the simplified model of our system is based on exactly what you suggested: A and B elements interacting with each other with different strength. We hope that the model can guide further experiments and help us to properly set the conditions to incorporate the 'death' mechanism.
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n0w4k, is there any way to get access to your model ??? This is getting more interesting every minute....
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Kewl. You could also email me directly at ipsejan (at) gmail dot com. Thanks !
Question for n0w4k (Score:2)
First of all n0w4k, congratulations to you and your team on your work at Groningen.
Every day, there's a lot of tech news, but this is what i consider truly nextgen science. It stands out.
Second, i clicked the link. I expected to find something insightful to read, but apparently its paywalled.
http://www.nature.com/nchem/jo... [nature.com]
This paywall is something i do not understand. So my first question now is, who descided this to be paywalled, and why? Where does the PDF money go?
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Unfortunately, paywalling is a common problem with scientific publishing [slashdot.org]. Making it open access would cost us a few thousand euros and that money is spent better on doing research. Fortunately Nature journals provide a way to share articles freely on the internet [slashdot.org]. This link should work: https://t.co/wMF2wfbJDr [t.co]
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Might ve a temporary problem, but right now your paywall-free link in the sunmary goes to a nature paywall asking for $22, and your other twitter link goes to a "nature is broken right now, we will charge you later" page. Shame as your article sounds interesting, any chance of putting the pre-submission draft on Arxiv?
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Not your problem I know, but the fact that I can't save a PDF of the paper is vastly annoying. I do actually like to go back and think over these things when I'm at work and don't have internet access. It's hugely insulting that Macmillan (IIRC, the international publishing house that own Nature) take the results of publicly-funded research and paywall it. At least in astrophysics, Arxiv has long
death system required? (Score:1)
How can a death system be required, when you can have the later generations feed off of the previous generations.
So they don't die. they just get re-used by the offspring...
Sounds like the Andromeda Strain meets Omega Man (Score:2)
I think something like this is how life started (Score:2)
Didn't they ever watch Stargate SG1? (Score:2)
Free to look at it live, (Score:2)
Creationists won’t care (Score:2)
I know exactly what would happen if I sent this link to my father, who is a creationist. He would tell me that it doesn’t prove anything. When I was a kid (and didn’t know enough to see through his poor logic), he addressed the issue of “what if scientists created new life in a lab.” He explained that having intelligent people spend millions of dollars to design a new life form is not the same as it happening by accident in nature. Of course he’s right, technically. We sti
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Not untrue, but there are also a LOT of Muslims who don't consider themselves to be particularly "fundamentalist" (for different "Fundamentals" to the Protestant Fundies [wikipedia.org]) , but who are profoundly creationist and if prodded would automatically leap to a YEC stance.
When I was working in Turkey a few months ago, my Turkish fellow geologists described even more pronounced difficulty
Corrected the article URL for ya (Score:2)
There are some strange, broken header pages which curiously enough do not link directly to the actual details. Here is the proper page:
http://www.nature.com.sci-hub.io/nchem/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nchem.2419.html
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Could you include a mineral with an -OH rich surface to scavenge these byproducts from the (solution) part of the system?
Oh noes! I'm channelling Cairns-Smith again! Clay minerals! Clay minerals! All is clay minerals! (ISBN-10: 0521346827)
[Ha ha. I actually saw AGCS lecture when I was an undergrad. Very passionate lecture, and at the time I thought that this was possibly one o
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Some years ago I gathered up and posted some amateur speculations about abiogenesis (in two parts). Whether or not any [wordpress.com] of them [wordpress.com] could be interesting or even useful, remains to be seen.
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I remember reading his stuff back in the mid-90s. It gave me a headache then, and I suspect it'll give me a bigger one now.
Props (or whatever the modern word is) for implementing a very simple version experimentally.
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Did your spelling checker swallow the obligatory "Muwahahahahah !!!" or did you deliberately silence it?
I'm now afraid. Very afraid. Mad scientists toying with creating artificial life forms AND suppressing their "Muwahahahah !!" reflex. This sounds like the plot for a B-movie. What could possibly go wrong?
Does your lab have a Jacob's L [wikipedia.org]
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For the medals, obviously. Gold, several inches across, and funded by explosives.
Yeah, that sounds a real good campaign slogan. Should be a real winner. I think you should sky-write it over the White House with your hand-controlled drone for maximum publicity. You'll be on TV!
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Well, as an Anonymous Coward, you'd be the perfect example of a completely unintelligent organisms to do the design.
I notice that you're too cowardly to associate your identifier with your reading incomprehension.