I know Mike Hollinshead sent this to Keith as well.   Has anyone else heard
of this?  Pete?   Something about an electrical universe without the need
for all of the complicated stuff.    Electrical Universe.   

 

A poor dumb artist just wondering.

 

http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26059/?ref=rss

Why Life Is Physics, Not Chemistry
The idea that life boils down to chemistry is being usurped by a much more
ambitious idea, says two of the world's leading biophysicists.

KFC 11/22/2010

11 COMMENTS
In the history of science, there are many examples of simple changes in
perspective that lead to profound insights into the nature of the cosmos.
The invention of the telescope is perhaps one example. Another is the
realisation that chemical energy, thermodynamic energy, kinetic energy and
the like are all manifestations of the same stuff. You can surely supply
your own favourite instances here.

One of the more important examples in 20th century science is that biology
is the result of evolution, not the other way round. By that way if
thinking, evolution is a process, an algorithm even; albeit one with
unimaginable power. Exploit evolution and there is little you cannot
achieve.

In recent years, computer scientists have begun to exploit evolution's
amazing power. One thing they have experienced time and time again is
evolution's blind progress. Put a genetic algorithm to work and it will
explore the evolutionary landscape, looking for local minima. When it finds
one, there is no knowing whether it is the best possible solution or whether
it sits within touching distance of an evolutionary abyss that represents a
solution of an entirely different order of magnitude.

That hints at the possibility that life as it has evolved on Earth is but a
local minima in a vast landscape of evolutionary possibilities. If that's
the case, biologists are studying a pitifully small fraction of something
bigger. Much bigger.

Today, we get an important insight into this state of affairs thanks to a
fascinating paper by Nigel Goldenfeld and Carl Woese at the University of
Illinois. Goldenfeld is a physicist by training while Woese, also a
physicist, is one of the great revolutionary figures in biology. In the
1970s, he defined a new kingdom of life, the Archae, and developed a theory
of the origin of life called the RNA world hypothesis, which has gained much
fame or notoriety depending on your viewpoint.

Together they suggest that biologists need to think about their field in a
radical new way: as a branch of condensed matter physics. Their basic
conjecture is that life is an emergent phenomena that occurs in systems that
are far out of equilibrium. If you accept this premise, then two questions
immediately arise: what laws describe such systems and how are we to get at
them.

Goldenfeld and Woese say that biologists' closed way of thinking on this
topic is embodied by the phrase: all life is chemistry. Nothing could be
further from the truth, they say.

They have an interesting analogy to help press their case: the example of
superconductivity. It would be easy to look at superconductivity and imagine
that it can be fully explained by the properties of electrons as they
transfer in and out of the outer atomic orbitals. You might go further and
say that superconductivity is all atoms and chemistry.

And yet the real explanation is much more interesting and profound. It turns
out that many of the problems of superconductivity are explained by a theory
which describes the relationship between electromagnetic fields and long
range order. When the symmetry in this relationship breaks down, the result
is superconductivity.

And it doesn't just happen in materials on Earth. This kind of symmetry
breaking emerges in other exotic places such as the cores of quark stars.
Superconductivity is an emergent phenomenon and has little to do with the
behaviour of atoms. A chemist would be flabbergasted.

According to Goldenfeld and Woese, life is like superconductivity. It is an
emergent phenomenon and we need to understand the fundamental laws of
physics that govern its behaviour. Consequently, only a discipline akin to
physics can reveal such laws and biology as it is practised today does not
fall into this category.

That's a brave and provocative idea that may not come as a complete surprise
to the latest generation of biophysicists. For the others, it should be a
call to arms.

We'll be watching the results with interest.

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1011.4125: Life Is Physics: Evolution As A Collective
Phenomenon Far From Equilibriu

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