Abstract
1 min readI (and most scientists) would answer, “By accident.” But what an absolutely unlikely accident it must have been! The earth on which life first appeared – prebiotic earth – was most inhospitable: a violent place, wracked by storms and volcanoes, wrenched by the pull of a moon that was much closer than the one we know now, still battered by cosmic impacts. On its surface and in its oceans were myriads of organic compounds, some formed in processes occurring on earth, some imported by infalls from space. Out of this universe of tumult and molecules, somehow a small subset of chemical processes emerged and accidentally replicated, thus stumbling toward what became the first cells. How could such a chaotic mixture of molecules have generated cells? Order usually decays toward disorder: Why do the tracks that led to life point in the opposite direction?
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