Dr_Vesuvius t1_jboah5t wrote
Reply to comment by UnfinishedProjects in I just learned that the known shortest DNA in an “organism” is about 1700 base pairs in a certain virus. Is there a minimum amount of “code” required for an organism (or virus) to function in any capacity? by mcbergstedt
You’re thinking of “life” as if it were a soul, some chemicals gain a “spark of life” and then they are alive.
It’s more helpful to think of life as being those things which reproduce. This isn’t a perfect definition either, of course.
You have a primordial soup full of basic organic chemicals. Some bits of RNA, some proteins, some sugars. These chemicals are already undergoing natural selection, as more stable ones survive longer, but they aren’t undergoing evolution because there is no “descent with modification”. Maybe some chemicals, through chance, form a very simple precursor to a cell which dramatically increases their survival. They can absorb small molecules while protecting themselves from the environment. Great. Does not mean they are alive. Can that structure divide into two parts which can then both grow and divide again? That’s what makes something alive.
UnfinishedProjects t1_jbou27j wrote
You made me understand primordial soup for the first time. I mean I understood what they meant but I never thought about it being an actual soup of all the required ingredients.
BiggestFlower t1_jbovaje wrote
You were probably contemplating primordial, when you should have been considering soup.
[deleted] t1_jbp1u5c wrote
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