a) enough supernovae had produced enough of the heavier elements all the way up to gold and uranium
b) this elemental dust started to accumulate in the vicinity of what would one day become our solar system
c) the dust formed a disk, and the disk began to get lumpy, and the lumps started forming our star and planets
d) the planets formed spheres, the sun ignited
e) debris (heavy lumps of matter congealed in the disk) began to be attracted to the heavy planets and collided with them, heating the planets, and adding more matter (like water)
f) cycles of collision, heating, additions of matter including water, cooling, eventually produced some planets that were wet and reasonably cool.
g) geological processes kept the early planets (like earth) in physical turmoil for quite a long time — The Ancient Crank
t doesn't solve the problem of how organic molecules (like methane and a bunch of other ones) became life. — Bitter Crank
After his resignation from Cambridge, Hoyle moved to the Lake District and occupied his time with a mix of treks across the moors, writing books, visiting research centres around the world, and working on science ideas that have been nearly-universally rejected.
Before the Big Bang, there was nothing. — Ellie
But I think the 'warm little pond' type of neo-darwinism, which imagines life as a kind of chemical reaction that then gets elaborated by the 'darwinian algorithm' is a hopeless over-simplification. — Wayfarer
If I understood Wayfarer correctly, when Hoyle said "the fix is in" after discovering the uncanny properties of carbon which makes it necessary and uniquely suited to facilitating life, he was wrong to think that this meant anything beyond an understanding and description of existing genetic mechanisms. — VagabondSpectre
Hoyle knew that nuclear reactions can sometimes be greatly amplified by the phenomenon of resonance, similar to the way that an opera singer can shatter a glass by hitting a certain pitch. Carbon nuclei can resonate too, if the masses and energies of the colliding particles that go to form it are just right. Hoyle worked backwards — he knew the particle masses and energies, and he used them to predict the existence of a carbon resonance.
He then pestered Willy Fowler, a nuclear physicist at the California Institute of Technology, to do an experiment to test the prediction. And sure enough, Hoyle was right. Carbon has a resonant state at exactly the right energy to enable stars to manufacture abundant carbon, and thereby seed the universe with this life-encouraging substance.
Hoyle immediately realised just what a close-run thing this mechanism is. Like Baby Bear’s porridge in the story of Goldilocks, the energy of the carbon resonance has to be “just right”. Too high or too low, and the consequences for life would be catastrophic.
So what determines the carbon resonance? Ultimately it depends on the strength of the force that binds protons and neutrons together in the nucleus. That force is one of the unexplained parameters of basic physics — one of the knobs on the Designer Machine if you like. If the strength of the force that determined the carbon resonance was only a fraction stronger or weaker, it is doubtful there would be observers in the universe to worry about the distinct absence of carbon.
Hoyle himself was deeply impressed by this discovery. “It looks like a put-up job,” he quipped. “A commonsense interpretation of the facts suggests that a superintellect has monkeyed with physics,” he later wrote. — Paul Davies
The big bang happened folks. It was undeniably the heat event that is responsible for the cosmos at large. "Beginning", "Everything", "Infinite", these are red-herrings; we know an expansion happened. — VagabondSpectre
It's just too much of a coincidence to say it's just chance. — TheMadFool
answer for yourself, what it is that is expanding — Metaphysician Undercover
I think it's interesting that the 'origin of life' is the one type of event for which the favoured scientific explanation is that it was a chance occurence. In all other matters, one expects a scientific hypothesis to provide a cause, or a reason, for what it seeks to explain. But not here. — Wayfarer
Space itself is expanding. — VagabondSpectre
I don't think that's correct, because it is the distance between objects which is expanding, not objects themselves. Objects don't expand. If you think that there is a real entity called "space" existing between objects, which is expanding, then what about the space within objects? — Metaphysician Undercover
I think that the concept of spatial expansion is really just the result of our inadequate understanding of the relationships between space, time, matter, and gravity. The theories used here misguide us. — Metaphysician Undercover
The chance involved in abiogenesis is very much like weather prediction, except it concerns an event that is still theoretical. Predicting the probability of life is like trying to predict how likely it is for a storm to form using only "at least 1 storm has existed" as information to base that prediction from. If we had perfect meteorological knowledge and perfect weather monitoring sattelites, we could say with 100% certainty when and where the next storm would emerge because we would understand the physical processes. — VagabondSpectre
If [the fundamental constants] were different, it's possible fundamentally different forms of matter would have emerged in their place, and subsequent intelligence composed of said matter would be still be amazed at how finely tuned their laws of physics are. — VagabondSpectre
All we know is that we're living in the energetic diffusion of a 13.75 billion year event that we can only describe as very hot and very dense. — VagabondSpectre
Great article, but it left me puzzled, not for the obvious reasons but rather why it did not mention anything about Synthetic Biology, and especially JC Venter. I understand that the people in the article you referenced are looking for the origin of life, how it could have happened and it sounds like it may be an emergent phenomena from what I read. I kept on waiting for the author to bring Venter's work his effort to create synthetic life, even if only in passing, seems like both searches ought to be related, but I don't know enough about it. So why, if you think there is a reason? — Cavacava
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