Was This Life's First Meal? (sciencemag.org) 91
sciencehabit shares a report from Science Magazine: Studies of the origin of life are replete with paradoxes. Take this doozy: Every known organism on Earth uses a suite of proteins -- and the DNA that helps build it -- to construct the building blocks of our cells. But those very building blocks are also needed to make DNA and proteins. The solution to this chicken-and-egg conundrum may lie at the site of hydrothermal vents, fissures in the sea floor that spew hot water and a wealth of other chemicals, researchers report today. Scientists say they have found that a trio of metal compounds abundant around the vents can cause hydrogen gas and carbon dioxide (CO2) to react to form a collection of energy-rich organic compounds critical to cell growth. And the high temperatures and pressures around the vents themselves may have jump-started life on Earth, the team argues.
The new work is "thrilling," says Thomas Carell, an origin of life chemist at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich who was not affiliated with the new project. The organic molecules the study generated include formate, acetate, and pyruvate, which Carell calls "the most fundamental molecules of energy metabolism," the process of converting nutrients into cell growth. The new results support a long-held idea about the origin of life known as "metabolism first hypothesis." It posits that geochemical processes on early Earth created a stew of simple energy-rich compounds that drove the synthesis of complex molecules, which eventually provided the materials for Darwinian evolution and life. The findings appear in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.
The new work is "thrilling," says Thomas Carell, an origin of life chemist at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich who was not affiliated with the new project. The organic molecules the study generated include formate, acetate, and pyruvate, which Carell calls "the most fundamental molecules of energy metabolism," the process of converting nutrients into cell growth. The new results support a long-held idea about the origin of life known as "metabolism first hypothesis." It posits that geochemical processes on early Earth created a stew of simple energy-rich compounds that drove the synthesis of complex molecules, which eventually provided the materials for Darwinian evolution and life. The findings appear in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.
Life now eats it (Score:2)
Re: Life now eats it (Score:2)
Yep, we could be on the 100th iteration of life that finally produced multicellular organisms. Those early single cell iterations left no fossil records. We know that at least one of the mass extinctions was caused when organisms started producing oxygen which was toxic to most other organisms at the time. Itâ(TM)s likely this scenario has played out dozens of times where the newer organism caused the rapid extinction of whatever it evolved from.
Re: Life now eats it (Score:5, Interesting)
Reminds me of a Larry Niven story on that very subject. A very old extraterrestrial race called the Chirpsithra (billions of years older than humans, if you believed them) had one very old member of their species that had visited Earth long before oxygen-breathing life existed; there was a sentient species with their own civilization, but oxygen was toxic to them, and the newer organisms that exhaled oxygen were literally causing them to go extinct -- and eventually they did.
Nonsense. (Score:1)
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God's pecker is a thermal vent?
Sounds plausible..
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Matthew 3:9
and do not think to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our father.’ For I say to you that God is able to raise up children to Abraham from these stones.
So... if this comes back on me... it's the Gnostics' fault.
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It... was a joke.
And not exactly "wiped out", concepts such as theosis and hesychasm exist yet today, acknowledged as Gnostic or not.
Basically, Valentinus messed it up for everyone, by calling his nonsense "Gnostic". He clearly didn't Know.
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Yes, well, one can't sell Catholicism to a Protestant anyway...
Re: Nonsense. (Score:2)
Question: What's the difference between a priest and a pimple?
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just mention the Inquisition.
But I wasn't expecting them!
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The improbability of IC structures is in that they need to be genetically produced. That is, sequential mutations, with survivability of each step. That's rather far afield of God.
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Couldn't have, and had no need to. He's eternally existent. Rather like the "steady state" model of the universe.
Until that theist Lemaitre proposed the Big Bang, and corrected the scientists on that.
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Well, reading the bible you'd sure get the idea that he has. At least he matured over time, from a kid throwing a tantrum when its toys don't work the way he wants so he flushes them down the toilet to a laid back guy who lets his son take over the family business.
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Never heard Internal Combustion engines being used as a justification for religiosity. That's a unique approach.
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Of course I've messed with people who have knocked on my door before, and the closest thing I ever got to an answer was "We're not supposed to know that yet", which really isn't an answer at all, just a dodge.
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If the material universe ceased to exist, would 2+2=4 still be true?
Welcome to the world of metaphysics. Like math.
Does math need to be created, or is it that it just -is-?
May as well go straight to the boss-level questions tonight.
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If the 'material universe' ceased to exist, there would be no 'laws of physics', and for that matter there'd be no us, so, really, the question seems to be pointless. More philosophical than scientific.
If a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it fall, does it make a sound?
Kind of like that.
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Science is subordinate to and came from philosophy, so that isn't really an argument.
It's basically a question of whether metaphysical things exist. If 2+2=4 is true regardless of material reducibility, they do.
In other words, they do.
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Face it on the level but I take you every time on a one on one [youtube.com]
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Philosophy -> metaphysics -> empiricism -> science
"People looked at stuff before then" doesn't qualify.
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Even dogs and crows understand cause/effect and can make predictions (hypotheses) based on evidence and past experience. I'm not sure what a crow philosopher would come up with, but corvid scientists and engineers come up with tools and multi-step plans that use unrelated physical phenomena like water displacement to achieve their goals.
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Okay, don't. Evolution then eliminates you, issue solved.
Again, when you get off your domain-inappropriate demand for "proof", which is for math and vodka, decide as you do for everything else in your life, on the basis of -evidence-. [slashdot.org]
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does 2 exist though?
Does squiggly line + triangle = banana? Why or why not?
Some thinking entity had to create the number 2.
People made up math, the same as they made up god.
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So we're a piss take?
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But, well, the Trollface might actually survive.
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If you're really unironically a Creationist then there's only two words that need to be said here: Prove it.
Note: 'Faith' is not 'proof'. Neither is the Bible. Netiher is any argument that is faith-based, or based on pseudo-science, circular logic, etc.
Of course you can't provide any such evidence so I won't wait around for it.
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Well, sorry you know so little about epistemology, but demand for "proof" here is disingenuous for the domain.
Virtually nothing can be "proven" outside of pure math. That's what the refutation of Logical Positivism and Godel's Incompleteness Theorem have thoroughly demonstrated. However, if you want -evidence-, rather than your odd demand to be essentially force-converted by presentation of "proof", here it is. [slashdot.org]
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Really?
Are we out of the warranty period yet? Because let's face it, the design sucks and looks like something that just happened, I hope we didn't pay much for that.
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The designer was an idiot then, immune system that can go berserk and kill or maim you, knees that fall apart, a spine for a critter that walks erect (WTF?) and carries things, skin with shitty resistance to solar energy or anything even slightly sharp, sweat glands that can pump out water faster than the digestive system can absorb it, and don't forget our fragile, limited eyes where the nerves and blood vessels pass OVER the receptor cells and greatly limit their sensitivity. If we were all designed then
"chicken-and-egg" problem simple (Score:3)
chicken-and-egg conundrum
That is a simple problem. Egg first. Something that was not a chicken laid a chicken egg. The "not a chicken" being one genetic mutation away from being a chicken. The egg being named by its contents.
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I name an egg by how it is prepared, poached, fried, scrambled...
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Then a boss-level problem next for the level, naturally: What objective validity is there to any conceptual division of "chicken" versus "not a chicken"?
And you haven't made it to the world boss yet. [wikipedia.org]
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Then a boss-level problem next for the level, naturally: What objective validity is there to any conceptual division of "chicken" versus "not a chicken"? And you haven't made it to the world boss yet. [wikipedia.org]
Already answered. The DNA, the mutation that turns is-not into is. That mutation should have a physical manifestation, or else it would not have been selected as the "difference".
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The DNA, and the resulting differences, are arbitrarily selected and arbitrarily called a particular species.
That's what the link is about.
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The DNA, and the resulting differences, are arbitrarily selected and arbitrarily called a particular species. That's what the link is about.
Sure. However there are two different questions. Is there a line genetically differentiating one species from another? Yes. Where is the line? Don't care, only the existence of the line is necessary to answer chicken or egg. If we don't have an is-not parent and an is offspring we need to revisit Darwin.
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"Is there a line genetically differentiating one species from another? Yes. Where is the line? Don't care"
Odd position to take as "science".
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"Is there a line genetically differentiating one species from another? Yes. Where is the line? Don't care" Odd position to take as "science".
Not really. Science likes concise answers without extraneous material. Again the "don't care" is in the context of answering the question "chicken or egg". Sure there can be curiosity, something to look into on a different day, but then you are investigating something else.
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Yeah. Occam said something like that. Occam the theist, I mean.
Still, it seems you are abandoning any pretense at objective biological categorization. Which is actually a far-reaching dilemma, as detailed in the "Species Problem" link.
This, I mean. Even if the basement Wiki-editor couldn't bear to have the title admit a "problem" in biology, and changed the title, while oddly leaving the first sentence to say "problem" is what it is. [wikipedia.org]
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Human beings are all about arbitrary thresholds. Our brains crave them. We also hate to look closely at them because the cognitive dissonance hurts too much.
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Then a boss-level problem
Why invoke some sort of boss? Just let the chickens sort it out among themselves.
BTW, the correct answer to 'which came first, chicken or egg' is 'the rooster'.
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Trying to keep it fun with a video-game analogy. I'm getting bored.
Miller-Urey (Score:2)
I was sufficiently fascinated by this experiment in college to learn about Urey's role in WWII's development of an atomic bomb by separating heavy water and that Miller (a much younger man) was named by a popular magazine as America's most eligible bachelor.
That a single path or process of inorganic compounds becoming organisms is the default presumption is curious and suspicious to me. The framing is: What we first discover is the only means!
Even more specious is the r
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The Miller-Urey experiment took organic chemicals, applied a process to them, and got... organic chemicals.
Nothing approximating evolution was demonstrated. Congratulations.
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And produced nothing resembling abiogenesis or evolution. It produced chemicals.
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Weird how people seem to think if they can find anything I say is wrong, that means evolution won't eliminate them regardless.
Nope.
Re:Miller-Urey (Score:5, Insightful)
Your dismissal of "organic chemicals made organic chemicals" ignores that electrical stimulation of a relatively simple organic molecule (methane) and inorganic ones (ammonia, molecular hydrogen, and water) produced amino acids, some 13 of the 22 that comprise proteins necessary to living cells. The framing at that time had been, in the "primordial soup", lightening precipitated the "building blocks" of "life". Modern microbiology and genetic studies can now readily dismiss such a grand framing of assumptions as insufficient, but that's progress.
You are correct to assert this famous experiment is insufficient to either thoroughly or definitively evidence the mechanisms involved in the evolution of living organisms, but it is either disingenuous or fanatical to rhetorically dismiss the experiment as meaningless.
https://www.goodreads.com/book... [goodreads.com]
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Producing "building blocks" is unfalsifiable. Atoms are "building blocks".
Re: Miller-Urey (Score:2)
Neither are amino acids sufficient.
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Nonsense. He's perfectly correct. His statement is also about as useful as:
"The experiment took matter, applied a process to it, and got... matter."
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Simple. (Score:2)
Million Monkeys, Universe edition (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe it took a trillion trillion sequences of events all over the oceans of Earth for that one viable single-cell organism to be created. We'll probably never know.
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Kick you 'round the world, there ain't a thing that you can do [youtube.com]
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The probability of a sequence occurring -cannot- be more probable than its least-probable step.
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Probability is kinda pointless in a system where time is of little consequence.
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As much as the Creationists seethe and rage at the thought, life apparently was just a happy accident: just the right conditions at just the right time with just the right elements, and something alive was the result. Assuming there was some sort of 'intellgent design' is just indulging in circular logic, because whoever the 'intelligent designer' was had to have come from somewhere -- and then we're back to the who-made-who conundrum.
Maybe it took a trillion trillion sequences of events all over the oceans of Earth for that one viable single-cell organism to be created. We'll probably never know.
The exact order of events doesn't matter. You exist, ergo all evidence you will find in this universe will be evidence of the natural processes that allow(ed) you to exist.
You might as well think of it as procedurally-generated, like No Man's Sky: as far as you look, as deep as you look, you'll only find evidence of past events consistent with you being alive today. So we *know* what's out there, in broad strokes. There will be no big surprises. It's not like we're going to find that there was a red giant t
Panspermia (Score:2)
Panspermia can hardly be ruled out. Ever hardier bacteria has been incrementally discovered. We probably haven't found the limit yet.
But even so, thermal vents on any volcanic water-filled world are still a strong contender.
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If life is found on Mars that more or less is similar to Earth life, it could be argued that Earth seeded Mars. The only way to truly rule in favor of Panspermia is to find similar life on a relatively distant star system.
I suspect different sects will have different responses. The Bible doesn't rule out other inhabited planets. It's generally vague about most cosmological issues.
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It's a fake universe, completely rigged. Andyfake Cooper brought in props at 3am when nobody was looking, painted on stars. I'm onto them, I know these things, believe me! I'll Sharpie them over and save the day yet again. #MUGA!
Take me back (Score:2)
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AndyKron remarked:
I wish I was primordial pre-life ooze. Things were simpler then
+1 Funny, please ... !
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high temperatures and pressures ... (Score:2)
high temperatures and pressures around the vents themselves may have jump-started life on Earth,
So: pulling yourself up by your bootstraps way before there were even bootstraps -- that's a pretty neat trick!
And once you're got that infinitesimal BIOS up and running, everything else is just adding on layer after layer. (Seven level OSI level my foot.)
Isn't this like 20 year old news? (Score:2)
Seriously, I think I have known this for a long time. Maybe this is new research with new findings but the idea that steam vents in the ocean might be where life originates from is not news.
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The observation that the conditions around vents can produce useful organic compounds is the new part.
The fun part of science is the getting drunk in a pub and saying "hey, what if life started around hydrothermal vents?" The work part is spending the next few decades (or centuries) figuring out the details.
Lovecraftian? (Score:1)
Life developing in hot vents (Score:1)
If that's the case then I would expect life to continually reinvent itself. If life began in the thermal vents then isn't it reasonable to think that those conditions continually create life or the precursors to life. How can we test that hypothesis?