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The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin…
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The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life (édition 1999)

par Paul Davies (Auteur)

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577441,168 (3.79)3
This work examines what is perhaps science's ultimate question: the origins of life on earth. Paul Davies presents a series of recent discoveries which are leading to some startling theories about the origins of life on earth. New life forms have been discovered in bizarre habitats: deep underground and under the ocean floor. The conditions thought to be necessary for life have thus been radically revised and this has led to the realization that life could very well exist on other planets hither to thought to be inhospitable. Further, cosmic impacts can transport these rock-dwelling micro-organisms from planet to planet across the solar system and beyond. so life could quite easily travel from earth to other planets. Indeed, life could have arrived on earth from elsewhere.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:Durglin
Titre:The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life
Auteurs:Paul Davies (Auteur)
Info:Simon & Schuster (1999), Edition: 1, 304 pages
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Mots-clés:science

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The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life par Paul Davies

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This a top-class survey of the subject—including some of its profounder aspects because this isn’t just a scientific problem, it’s a philosophical and even religious one too.
    Scientifically, it hinges on the role which chance may, or may not, have played. Is life an inevitable expression of the various laws of nature: “run” the universe a thousand times over and would you always get life (and perhaps mind)? Or is it a flukey outcome of those laws, a falling of the cosmic dice so improbable it would likely never be repeated? The first possibility not only sounds like foresight, a Plan, but since the laws of nature work the same way everywhere then life will prove to be common throughout the universe. The second, by contrast, leaves us alone and, perhaps, meaningless as well.
    To explore such ideas, though, you need the relevant background information, and Davies guides us through it in exceptionally plain language. For a start, there’s the whole business of what “life” actually is, and what it is not. Creationists, for instance, often argue that its mere existence contradicts the laws of physics—entropy and all that, the thermodynamic running down of the universe—and Chapter 2 includes a wonderfully clear explanation of how that is a misunderstanding both of living things and the universe itself. Then there’s DNA and the mind-numbing complexity of cell and genetic code alike. And there’s the whole subject of where life may have begun (if indeed it ever did): on the Earth’s surface, or perhaps miles beneath it inside rocks then spreading up to the surface? This latter, the world of subterranean “extremophile” microbes, is a fascinating and relatively new subject which questions the assumption “…that surface life is ‘normal’, and subterranean life is an off-beat adaptation… Could it be that the reasoning is literally upside down, and that the truth is just the opposite?” Then again though, did life begin on Earth at all, or did it arrive here from elsewhere (from Mars for instance, which early in its own history was very Earthlike)? Or did life never have a beginning and has always existed? This last one is just part of the whole question of whether the universe itself had a beginning or not, or is infinitely old.
    There’s a lot more here besides and, although it was last updated in 2003, this book is still not only a clear-headed guide through its subject, but an unusually deep one too. Absolutely excellent. ( )
  justlurking | Jun 14, 2023 |
An interesting book looking at the very origins of life on earth and explaining the way microbes and bacteria work and how they live in the most extreme of environments. There is a lot on the second law of thermodynamics and how it relates to biological entities. There is a lot on DNA and RNA and the way that these can be made from amino acids.

He considers the possibility of life having existing on Mars millions of years ago, and the possibilities that microbes could have been carried from one planet to the other after meteor strikes.

Some of the science was a bit beyond me, but the majority was clear. ( )
  PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
Good review of current thinking and research into the origin of life. Davies is an engaging writer, so this is a good starting point to learn about this enduring mystery. ( )
  yapete | Jun 2, 2008 |
How unlikely is the actual beginning of life. While Davies never advocates deism (or theism for that matter) one is left with a profound sense of wonder on the origin of life. It really is a miracle. I think that the Universe is somehow predisposed to life though some underlying principle that we've yet to fully comprehend. If it isn't then the chances of life elsewhere are very slim. ( )
  jefware | Apr 9, 2008 |
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This work examines what is perhaps science's ultimate question: the origins of life on earth. Paul Davies presents a series of recent discoveries which are leading to some startling theories about the origins of life on earth. New life forms have been discovered in bizarre habitats: deep underground and under the ocean floor. The conditions thought to be necessary for life have thus been radically revised and this has led to the realization that life could very well exist on other planets hither to thought to be inhospitable. Further, cosmic impacts can transport these rock-dwelling micro-organisms from planet to planet across the solar system and beyond. so life could quite easily travel from earth to other planets. Indeed, life could have arrived on earth from elsewhere.

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