Energy flow and the organization of life
Open Access
- 1 September 2007
- journal article
- other
- Published by Wiley in Complexity
- Vol. 13 (1) , 51-59
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cplx.20191
Abstract
Understanding the emergence and robustness of life requires accounting for both chemical specificity and statistical generality. We argue that the reverse of a common observation—that life requires a source of free energy to persist—provides an appropriate principle to understand the emergence, organization, and persistence of life on earth. Life, and in particular core biochemistry, has many properties of a relaxation channel that was driven into existence by free energy stresses from the earth's geochemistry. Like lightning or convective storms, the carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus fluxes through core anabolic pathways make sense as the order parameters in a phase transition from an abiotic to a living state of the geosphere. Interpreting core pathways as order parameters would both explain their stability over billions of years, and perhaps predict the uniqueness of specific optimal chemical pathways. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Complexity, 2007Keywords
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