Life (cf. biota) is a characteristic that distinguishes objects that have signaling and self-sustaining processes (biology) from those that do not, either because such functions have ceased (death), or else because they lack such functions and are classified as .
In biology, the science of living organisms, life is the condition which distinguishes active organisms from inorganic matter. Living organisms undergo metabolism, maintain homeostasis, possess a capacity to grow, respond to stimuli, reproduce and, through natural selection, adapt to their environment in successive generations. More complex living organisms can communicate through various means. A diverse array of living organisms (life forms) can be found in the biosphere on Earth, and the properties common to these organisms—plants, animals, fungi, protists, archaea, and bacteria—are a carbon- and water-based cellular form with complex organization and heritable genetic information.
In philosophy and religion, the conception of life and its nature varies. Both offer interpretations as to how life relates to existence and consciousness, and both touch on many related issues, including life stance, purpose, conception of a god or gods, a soul or an afterlife.
Early theories about life
Materialism
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Some of the earliest theories of life were
materialist, holding that all that exists is matter, and that all life is merely a complex form or arrangement of matter.
Empedocles (430 BC) argued that every thing in the universe is made up of a combination of
four eternal "elements" or "roots of all": earth, water, air, and fire. All change is explained by the arrangement and rearrangement of these four elements. The various forms of life are caused by an appropriate mixture of elements. For example, growth in plants is explained by the natural downward movement of earth and the natural upward movement of fire.
Democritus (460 BC), the disciple of Leucippus, thought that the essential characteristic of life is having a soul (psyche). In common with other ancient writers, he used the term to mean the principle of living things that causes them to function as a living thing. He thought the soul was composed of fire atoms, because of the apparent connection between life and heat, and because fire moves. He also suggested that humans originally lived like animals, gradually developing communities to help one another, originating language, and developing crafts and agriculture.
In the scientific revolution of the 17th century, mechanistic ideas were revived by philosophers like Descartes.
Hylomorphism
Hylomorphism is the theory (originating with
Aristotle (322 BC)) that all things are a combination of matter and form. Aristotle was one of the first ancient writers to approach the subject of life in a scientific way. Biology was one of his main interests, and there is extensive biological material in his extant writings. According to him, all things in the material universe have both matter and form. The form of a living thing is its
soul (Greek
psyche, Latin
anima). There are three kinds of souls: the "vegetative soul" of plants, which causes them to grow and decay and nourish themselves, but does not cause motion and sensation; the "animal soul" which causes animals to move and feel; and the rational soul which is the source of consciousness and reasoning which (Aristotle believed) is found only in man. Each higher soul has all the attributes of the lower one. Aristotle believed that while matter can exist without form, form cannot exist without matter, and therefore the soul cannot exist without the body.
Consistent with this account is a teleological explanation of life. A teleological explanation accounts for phenomena in terms of their purpose or goal-directedness. Thus, the whiteness of the polar bear's coat is explained by its purpose of camouflage. The direction of causality is the other way round from materialistic science, which explains the consequence in terms of a prior cause. Modern biologists now reject this functional view in terms of a material and causal one: biological features are to be explained not by looking forward to future optimal results, but by looking backwards to the past evolutionary history of a species, which led to the natural selection of the features in question.
Vitalism
Vitalism is the belief that the life-principle is essentially immaterial. This originated with
Stahl (17th century), and held sway until the middle of the 19th century. It appealed to philosophers such as
Henri Bergson,
Nietzsche,
Wilhelm Dilthey, anatomists like
Bichat, and chemists like
Liebig.
Vitalism underpinned the idea of a fundamental separation of organic and inorganic material, and the belief that organic material can only be derived from living things. This was disproved in 1828 when Friedrich Wöhler prepared urea from inorganic materials. This so-called Wöhler synthesis is considered the starting point of modern organic chemistry. It is of great historical significance because for the first time an organic compound was produced from inorganic reactants.
Later, Helmholtz, anticipated by Mayer, demonstrated that no energy is lost in muscle movement, suggesting that there were no vital forces necessary to move a muscle. These empirical results led to the abandonment of scientific interest in vitalistic theories, although the belief lingered on in non-scientific theories such as homeopathy, which interprets diseases and sickness as caused by disturbances in a hypothetical vital force or life force.
Definitions
It is still a challenge for scientists and philosophers to define life in unequivocal terms. Defining life is difficult—in part—because life is a process, not a pure substance. Any definition must be sufficiently broad to encompass all life with which we are familiar, and it should be sufficiently general that, with it, scientists would not miss life that may be fundamentally different from life on Earth.
Biology
Since there is no unequivocal definition of life, the current understanding is descriptive, where life is a characteristic of organisms that exhibit all or most of the following
phenomena:
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Homeostasis: Regulation of the internal environment to maintain a constant state; for example, electrolyte concentration or sweating to reduce temperature.
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Organization: Being structurally composed of one or more
cells, which are the basic units of life.
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Metabolism: Transformation of energy by converting chemicals and energy into cellular components (
anabolism) and decomposing organic matter (
catabolism). Living things require
energy to maintain internal organization (
homeostasis) and to produce the other phenomena associated with life.
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Growth: Maintenance of a higher rate of anabolism than catabolism. A growing organism increases in size in all of its parts, rather than simply accumulating matter.
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Adaptation: The ability to change over a period of time in response to the environment. This ability is fundamental to the process of
evolution and is determined by the organism's
heredity as well as the composition of metabolized substances, and external factors present.
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Response to stimuli: A response can take many forms, from the contraction of a unicellular organism to external chemicals, to complex reactions involving all the senses of multicellular organisms. A response is often expressed by motion, for example, the leaves of a plant turning toward the sun (
phototropism) and by
chemotaxis.
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Reproduction: The ability to produce new individual organisms, either
asexually from a single parent organism, or
sexually from two parent organisms.
Proposed
To reflect the minimum phenomena required, some have proposed other biological definitions of life:
Living things are systems that tend to respond to changes in their environment, and inside themselves, in such a way as to promote their own continuation.
A network of inferior negative feedbacks (regulatory mechanisms) subordinated to a superior positive feedback (potential of expansion, reproduction).
A
systemic definition of life is that living things are
self-organizing and
autopoietic (self-producing). Variations of this definition include
Stuart Kauffman's definition as an
autonomous agent or a
multi-agent system capable of reproducing itself or themselves, and of completing at least one
thermodynamic work cycle.
Life is a self-sustained chemical system capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution.
Things with the capacity for metabolism and motion. since they possess
genes,
evolve by
natural selection, and replicate by creating multiple copies of themselves through self-assembly. However, viruses do not
metabolize and require a host cell to make new products. Virus self-assembly within host cells has implications for the study of the
origin of life, as it may support the hypothesis that life could have started as self-assembling organic molecules.
Biophysics
Biophysicists have also commented on the nature and qualities of life forms—notably that they function on
negative entropy. In more detail, according to physicists such as
John Bernal,
Erwin Schrödinger,
Eugene Wigner, and
John Avery, life is a member of the class of
phenomena which are open or continuous systems able to decrease their internal
entropy at the expense of substances or
free energy taken in from the
environment and subsequently rejected in a degraded form (see:
entropy and life).
Living systems theories
Some scientists have proposed in the last few decades that a general
living systems theory is required to explain the nature of life. Such a general theory, arising out of the
ecological and
biological sciences, attempts to map general principles for how all living systems work. Instead of examining phenomena by attempting to break things down into component parts, a general living systems theory explores phenomena in terms of dynamic patterns of the relationships of organisms with their environment.
Gaia hypothesis
The idea that the Earth is alive is probably as old as humankind, but the first public expression of it as a fact of science was by a Scottish scientist,
James Hutton. In 1785 he stated that the Earth was a superorganism and that its proper study should be
physiology. Hutton is rightly remembered as the father of geology, but his idea of a living Earth was forgotten in the intense reductionism of the 19th century. The
Gaia hypothesis, originally proposed in the 1960s by scientist
James Lovelock, explores the idea that the life on Earth functions as a single organism which actually defines and maintains environmental conditions necessary for its survival.
Nonfractionability
Robert Rosen (1991) built on the assumption that the explanatory powers of the mechanistic worldview cannot help understand the realm of living systems. One of several important clarifications he made was to define a system component as "a unit of organization; a part with a function, i.e., a definite relation between part and whole." From this and other starting concepts, he developed a "relational theory of systems" that attempts to explain the special properties of life. Specifically, he identified the "nonfractionability of components in an organism" as the fundamental difference between living systems and "biological machines."
Life as a property of ecosystems
A systems view of life treats environmental
fluxes and biological fluxes together as a "reciprocity of influence", and a reciprocal relation with environment is arguably as important for understanding life as it is for understanding ecosystems. As Harold J. Morowitz (1992) explains it, life is a property of an
ecological system rather than a single organism or species. He argues that an ecosystemic definition of life is preferable to a strictly biochemical or physical one.
Robert Ulanowicz (2009) also highlights mutualism as the key to understand the systemic, order-generating behavior of life and ecosystems.
Origin
Evidence suggests that
life on Earth has existed for about 3.7
billion years. All known life forms share fundamental molecular mechanisms, and based on these observations, theories on the origin of life attempt to find a mechanism explaining the formation of a primordial single cell organism from which all life originates. There are many different hypotheses regarding the path that might have been taken from simple
organic molecules via pre-cellular life to protocells and metabolism. Many models fall into the "
genes-first" category or the "
metabolism-first" category, but a recent trend is the emergence of hybrid models that combine both categories.
There is no scientific consensus as to how life originated and all proposed theories are highly speculative. However, most currently accepted scientific models build in one way or another on the following hypotheses:
The Miller-Urey experiment, and the work of Sidney Fox, suggest that conditions on the primitive Earth may have favored chemical reactions that synthesized some amino acids and other organic compounds from inorganic precursors.
Phospholipids spontaneously form lipid bilayers, the basic structure of a cell membrane.
Life as we know it today synthesizes proteins, which are polymers of amino acids using instructions encoded by cellular genes—which are polymers of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Protein synthesis also entails intermediary ribonucleic acid (RNA) polymers. One possibility is that genes came first and then proteins. Another possibility is that proteins came first and then genes. However, because genes are required to make proteins, and proteins are required to make genes, the problem of considering which came first is like that of the chicken or the egg. Most scientists have adopted the hypothesis that because DNA and proteins function together so intimately, it's unlikely that they arose independently. Therefore, many scientists consider the possibility, apparently first suggested by Francis Crick, that the first life was based on the DNA-protein intermediary: RNA. even before the catalytic properties of RNA had been demonstrated by Thomas Cech.
A significant issue with the RNA-first hypothesis is that experiments designed to synthesize RNA from simple precursors have not been nearly as successful as the Miller-Urey experiments that synthesized other organic molecules from inorganic precursors. One reason for the failure to create RNA in the laboratory is that RNA precursors are very stable and do not react with each other under ambient conditions. However, the successful synthesis of certain RNA molecules under conditions hypothesized to exist prior to life on Earth has been achieved by adding alternative precursors in a specified order with the precursor phosphate present throughout the reaction. This study makes the RNA-first hypothesis more plausible to many scientists.
Recent experiments have demonstrated true Darwinian evolution of unique RNA enzymes (ribozymes) made up of two separate catalytic components that replicate each other in vitro. In describing this work from his laboratory, Gerald Joyce stated: "This is the first example, outside of biology, of evolutionary adaptation in a molecular genetic system." Such experiments make the possibility of a primordial RNA World even more attractive to many scientists.
Conditions for life
The diversity of life on Earth today is a result of the dynamic interplay between
genetic opportunity, metabolic capability,
environmental challenges, and
symbiosis. For most of its existence, Earth's habitable environment has been dominated by
microorganisms and subjected to their
metabolism and
evolution. As a consequence of such microbial activities on a
geologic time scale, the physical-chemical environment on Earth has been changing, thereby determining the path of evolution of subsequent life. In most ecosystems the conditions vary during the day and often shift from one
season to the next. To live in most ecosystems, then, organisms must be able to survive a range of conditions, called "range of tolerance." Outside of that are the "zones of physiological stress," where the survival and reproduction are possible but not optimal. Outside of these zones are the "zones of intolerance," where life for that organism is implausible. It has been determined that organisms that have a wide range of tolerance are more widely distributed than organisms with a narrow range of tolerance.
—often represented by the
acronym CHNOPS. Together these make up
nucleic acids,
proteins and
lipids, the bulk of living matter.
However, alternative hypothetical types of biochemistry have been proposed which eliminate one or more of these elements, swap out an element for one not on the list, or change required chiralities or other chemical properties. For example, the recently discovered GFAJ-1 bacteria in Mono Lake, California may be able to partially substitute phosphorus with arsenic, which is toxic to most forms of life.
Classification of life
Traditionally, people have divided organisms into the classes of
plants and
animals, based mainly on their ability of movement. The first known attempt to classify organisms was conducted by the Greek philosopher
Aristotle (384–322 BC). He classified all living organisms known at that time as either a plant or an animal. Aristotle distinguished animals with blood from animals without blood (or at least without red blood), which can be compared with the concepts of
vertebrates and
invertebrates respectively. He divided the blooded animals into five groups: viviparous quadrupeds (
mammals),
birds, oviparous quadrupeds (
reptiles and
amphibians),
fishes and
whales. The bloodless animals were also divided into five groups:
cephalopods,
crustaceans, insects (which also included the
spiders,
scorpions, and
centipedes, in addition to what we now define as
insects), shelled animals (such as most
molluscs and
echinoderms) and "
zoophytes." Though Aristotle's work in zoology was not without errors, it was the grandest biological synthesis of the time and remained the ultimate authority for many centuries after his death.
The exploration of the American continent revealed large numbers of new plants and animals that needed descriptions and classification. In the latter part of the 16th century and the beginning of the 17th, careful study of animals commenced and was gradually extended until it formed a sufficient body of knowledge to serve as an anatomical basis for classification.
In the late 1740s, Carolus Linnaeus introduced his method, still used, to formulate the scientific name of every species. Linnaeus took every effort to improve the composition and reduce the length of the many-worded names by abolishing unnecessary rhetoric, introducing new descriptive terms and defining their meaning with an unprecedented precision. By consistently using his system, Linnaeus separated nomenclature from taxonomy. This convention for naming species is referred to as binomial nomenclature.
The fungi were originally treated as plants. For a short period Linnaeus had placed them in the taxon Vermes in Animalia. He later placed them back in Plantae. Copeland classified the Fungi in his Protoctista, thus partially avoiding the problem but acknowledged their special status. The problem was eventually solved by Whittaker, when he gave them their own kingdom in his five-kingdom system. As it turned out, the fungi are more closely related to animals than to plants.
As new discoveries enabled us to study cells and microorganisms, new groups of life were revealed, and the fields of cell biology and microbiology were created. These new organisms were originally described separately in protozoa as animals and protophyta/thallophyta as plants, but were united by Haeckel in his kingdom protista, later the group of prokaryotes were split off in the kingdom Monera, eventually this kingdom would be divided in two separate groups, the Bacteria and the Archaea, leading to the six-kingdom system and eventually to the current three-domain system.
As microbiology, molecular biology and virology developed, non-cellular reproducing agents were discovered, such as viruses and viroids. Sometimes these entities are considered to be alive but others argue that viruses are not living organisms since they lack characteristics such as cell membrane, metabolism and do not grow or respond to their environments. Viruses can however be classed into "species" based on their biology and genetics but many aspects of such a classification remain controversial.
Since the 1960s a trend called cladistics has emerged, arranging taxa in an evolutionary or phylogenetic tree. It is unclear, should this be implemented, how the different codes will coexist.
Extraterrestrial life
hypothesis]]
Earth is the only planet in the universe known to harbor life. The
Drake equation, which relates the number of extraterrestrial civilizations in our galaxy with which we might come in contact, has been used to discuss the probability of life elsewhere, but scientists disagree on many of the values of variables in this equation. Depending on those values, the equation may either suggest that life arises frequently or infrequently.
The region around a main sequence star that could support Earth-like life on an Earth-like planet is known as the habitable zone. The inner and outer radii of this zone vary with the luminosity of the star, as does the time interval during which the zone will survive. Stars more massive than the Sun have a larger habitable zone, but will remain on the main sequence for a shorter time interval during which life can evolve. Small red dwarf stars have the opposite problem, compounded with higher levels of magnetic activity and the effects of tidal locking from close orbits. Hence, stars in the intermediate mass range such as the Sun may possess the optimal conditions for Earth-like life to develop. The location of the star within a galaxy may also have an impact on the likelihood of life forming.
Panspermia, also called exogenesis, is a hypothesis proposing that life originated elsewhere in the universe and was subsequently transferred to Earth in the form of spores perhaps via meteorites, comets or cosmic dust. However, this hypothesis does not help explain the ultimate origin of life.
Death
Death is the permanent termination of all vital functions or life processes in an organism or cell. After death, the remains of an organism become part of the
biogeochemical cycle. Organisms may be
consumed by a
predator or a
scavenger and leftover
organic material may then be further decomposed by
detritivores, organisms which recycle
detritus, returning it to the environment for reuse in the
food chain.
One of the challenges in defining death is in distinguishing it from life. Death would seem to refer to either the moment at which life ends, or when the state that follows life begins. However, determining when death has occurred requires drawing precise conceptual boundaries between life and death. This is problematic, however, because there is little consensus over how to define life. The nature of death has for millennia been a central concern of the world's religious traditions and of philosophical inquiry. Many religions maintain faith in either some kind of afterlife, reincarnation, or resurrection.
Extinction
Extinction is the gradual process by which a group of
taxa or
species dies out, reducing
biodiversity. The moment of extinction is generally considered to be the death of the last individual of that species. Because a species' potential
range may be very large, determining this moment is difficult, and is usually done retrospectively after a period of apparent absence. Species become extinct when they are no longer able to survive in changing
habitat or against superior competition. Over the history of the Earth, over 99% of all the species that have ever lived have gone extinct; however,
mass extinctions may have accelerated
evolution by providing opportunities for new groups of organisms to diversify.
Fossils
Fossils are the preserved remains or
traces of animals, plants, and other organisms from the remote past. The totality of fossils, both discovered and undiscovered, and their placement in fossil-containing
rock formations and
sedimentary layers (
strata) is known as the
fossil record. Such a preserved specimen is called a "fossil" if it is older than the arbitrary date of 10,000 years ago. Hence, fossils range in age from the youngest at the start of the
Holocene Epoch to the oldest from the
Archaean Eon, a few
billion years old.
See also
Alpha taxonomy
Artificial life
Biological immortality
Biology—the study of life
Carbon-based life
Cell
Conway's Game of Life
Entropy and life
Evolutionary history of life
Extraterrestrial life
Extremophile
Gaia hypothesis
Genetics
Genetic engineering
Hierarchy of life
Kingdom (biology)
Life form
Life on Mars
Meaning of life
Nature
Non-cellular life
Organic life
Organism
Origin of life
Personal life
Phylogenetics
Prehistoric life
Prion
Quality of life
Silicon-based life
Synthetic life
References
Further reading
Kauffman, Stuart. The Adjacent Possible: A Talk with Stuart Kauffman
Walker, Martin G. LIFE! Why We Exist...And What We Must Do to Survive Dog Ear Publishing, 2006, ISBN 1-59858-243-7
External links
Wikispecies - a free directory of life
"The Adjacent Possible: A Talk with Stuart Kauffman"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
Life under extreme conditions An in depth look at how life can form under the most extreme conditions and circumstaces.
Category:Biology
Category:Biological systems
Category:Biology terminology