Abiogenesis - how life on Earth arose from non-living matter, simple organic compounds that either originated here or that arrived from space.
Anyone have have any thoughts on this subject and how other hypotheses or theories might feed into it? I suspect that a multiverse and quantum mechanics might be required to overcome some of the low probabilities involved. I have no favourite theory as to the place where the metabolic cycle (probably an ancestor of the Krebs cycle) required for life started - warm little pond, tidal pool, black smoker, alkaline vent... The imbalance in proton concentration (pH) and consequent charge difference that is required across a membrane to lead to this cycle is perhaps unachievable unless two scenarios are somehow combined. The Moon was much closer to the Earth four billion years ago - at a tenth of the current distance - so its tidal effects would have been 1,000 times greater.
I tend to adhere to metabolism first, rather than membrane first or inheritance first - but I have been strongly influenced by communicators such as Nick Lane:
One might also speculate how - perhaps nearly a couple of billion years after the origin of life on Earth - eukaryotic cells developed from the endosymbiosis of archaea with aerobic bacteria (the latter to develop over time into the mitochondria found in nearly all eukaryotes - a few have lost them) and later with photosynthetic bacteria (the latter to develop over time into the chloroplasts found in plants) and somehow became so much more complex than their ancestors. We don't see evidence of intermediate eukaryotic forms. Those that do seem more primitive have been shown to have lost their complexity over time through evolution by natural selection.
Anyone have have any thoughts on this subject and how other hypotheses or theories might feed into it? I suspect that a multiverse and quantum mechanics might be required to overcome some of the low probabilities involved. I have no favourite theory as to the place where the metabolic cycle (probably an ancestor of the Krebs cycle) required for life started - warm little pond, tidal pool, black smoker, alkaline vent... The imbalance in proton concentration (pH) and consequent charge difference that is required across a membrane to lead to this cycle is perhaps unachievable unless two scenarios are somehow combined. The Moon was much closer to the Earth four billion years ago - at a tenth of the current distance - so its tidal effects would have been 1,000 times greater.
I tend to adhere to metabolism first, rather than membrane first or inheritance first - but I have been strongly influenced by communicators such as Nick Lane:
One might also speculate how - perhaps nearly a couple of billion years after the origin of life on Earth - eukaryotic cells developed from the endosymbiosis of archaea with aerobic bacteria (the latter to develop over time into the mitochondria found in nearly all eukaryotes - a few have lost them) and later with photosynthetic bacteria (the latter to develop over time into the chloroplasts found in plants) and somehow became so much more complex than their ancestors. We don't see evidence of intermediate eukaryotic forms. Those that do seem more primitive have been shown to have lost their complexity over time through evolution by natural selection.
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