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The Fifth Miracle:
The Search for the Origins of Life
By Paul Davies
The Penguin Group, 1998
Scientific controversies and a touch of mysticism
By Frank Gaglioti
4 November 1998
In his most recent publication The Fifth Miracle: The Search
for the Origin of Life, Paul Davies provides an intelligent
and well-written popular account of the scientific controversies
concerning the origins of life. He has brought together the astonishing
wealth of research--from the discovery of strange one-cell life
forms to the insights of geologists and astronomers into the formation
of the Earth and the solar system--which is providing the basis
for new theories and a richer understanding of this complex and
difficult scientific problem.
The book traces the scientific debate from its origins in the
evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin to the fossil evidence
of early life, laboratory attempts to simulate the conditions
for the formation of life, and arguments over the probable evolution
of the genetic code and proteins. Davies cites evidence for the
existence of organic matter in space and considers the possibilities
of life elsewhere in the universe.
One of the most intriguing aspects of The Fifth Miracle
is its exposition of a radical new theory developed to overcome
the limitations of some of the ideas first put forward by Charles
Darwin in 1871. Darwin proposed that life originated in "some
warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts,
light, heat, electricity, etc". In doing so he assumed, along
with the geologists of his day, that the Earth was relatively
stable when life was forming and subject to the same gradual processes
as today. But it is now clear from geological evidence that the
early history of the Earth was extremely violent.
The most turbulent period was from 4 to 3.8 billion years ago
when the Earth was bombarded by a hail of meteorites. Norman Sleep
of Stanford University has modeled the impact of planetesimals--objects
as large as 500 kilometres across which were very common in the
early Solar System. He found that a huge amount of rock would
have been vapourised, lifting the surface temperatures to 3,000°
C, turning the oceans into gas and driving off any atmosphere.
Such conditions would have been catastrophic for any living things
on the land surfaces or in the water. Sleep estimated that the
Earth would have taken 2,000 years to restabilise after each collision.
Davies poses the question: how did life establish itself under
such inhospitable conditions? One solution may be provided by
a number of unusual microorganisms discovered in places previously
thought to be not conducive to life. Black smokers--volcanic cracks
in deep ocean locations--are teeming with living organisms that
can tolerate temperatures as high as 110°C and sulphurous
fumes that are toxic to most other living things. Known as hyperthermophiles,
these microbes survive by metabolising the chemicals produced
from the volcanic activity. John Parkes of Bristol University
claims he has evidence of organisms that can survive at 169°C.
The international Ocean Drilling Program has discovered another
group of organisms deep underground in drill cores from rock samples
a kilometre beneath the seabed. Life seems to be particularly
prolific under the seabed as opposed to under land. Parkes has
discovered that population density actually rises from one billion
per cubic centimeter just below the surface, to 10 million per
cubic centimeter in deeper rock strata. Tommy Gold from Cornell
University has found evidence of biological activity seven kilometres
down.
A myriad of different organisms, now classified into a new
Kingdom known as the archaea, have been discovered surviving under
surprising conditions, from extreme cold to very high salt concentrations
and even exposure to highly corrosive chemicals such as sulphuric
acid. Comparative DNA studies indicate that the archaea are the
most primitive living things and most likely gave rise to the
other Kingdoms such as the bacteria and the eucarya, which include
plants and animals.
Davies postulates that life evolved deep underground, protected
from the constant bombardment by meteorites. These organisms would
have been able to evolve undisturbed by the catastrophic events
on the surface. When conditions settled about 3.8 billion years
ago, the subterranean organisms would have been pushed to the
surface by volcanic activity and earth movements. A few of the
organisms thrust onto the Earth's surface adapted to the lower
temperatures and fluctuating conditions that prevailed. The next
major evolutionary step was the transition to organisms that used
sunlight rather than chemicals as their source of energy--the
starting point for the diverse life forms that proliferate on
Earth today.
The Fifth Miracle also presents a contending theory,
known as panspermia, which holds that life developed on another
planet and made its way to Earth via a meteorite or comet. Davies
pinpoints Mars as the most likely planet for life to have originated
in our solar system. It had a far less turbulent history because
its smaller gravitational pull meant fewer meteorite impacts.
In addition Mars' cooler crust would have enabled microbes to
survive far deeper below the surface.
The analysis of photos taken of the Martian surface reveals
many geological formations, which resemble river valleys and flood
plains older than 3.5 billion years. The weathering of impact
craters indicates that Mars once had an atmosphere. If water and
an atmosphere were present then life may have proliferated on
the planet.
Moreover, a number of meteorites found on Earth are known to
have come from Mars--thrown into space possibly as a result of
volcanic eruptions or impacts on the Martian surface. Such meteorites
would have taken about a century to reach the Earth.
Could bacteria imbedded in a meteorite have endured for so
long in the extremely harsh conditions of space? A British microbiologist
John Postgate has found that bacteria starved of nutrients become
dormant and can survive almost indefinitely until more favorable
conditions arise. Davies postulates that microbes could have survived
the journey, including the deadly effects of cosmic radiation,
if buried within a metre of rock.
The Fifth Miracle is an absorbing book. It presents
complex scientific ideas in an accessible manner and gives an
insight into the extraordinary developments being made by researchers
in what is still a highly speculative scientific field. Unfortunately,
however, it is marred by Davies' own underlying mystical and religious
views as indicated in the book's title.
In the chapter entitled "The Message in the Machine,"
he constantly uses the analogy of computers and computer software
for the genetic code implying that there must have been a super
programmer, in other words, a God. He asks: "Might purpose
be a genuine property of nature right down to the cellular or
even subcellular level? There are no agreed answers to these questions,
but no account of the origin of life can be complete without addressing
them."
Davies is introducing a theme that has permeated much of his
work, including books such as The Mind of God. It is the
teleological argument used by the religious scholars of the Middle
Ages to demonstrate the existence of God. At the beginning of
the 19th century, the British theologian William Paley resurrected
teleology, arguing that just as an intricate object such as a
watch had been designed and created by a watchmaker so too the
products of nature, such as a bird's wing or a human eye, had
also been designed with a "purpose" by a creator. Darwin
decisively refuted Paley in 1859, with the publication of The
Origin of Species, which showed that the various complex adaptations
of living organisms could be explained through the process of
natural selection without any recourse to God.
In the final chapter entitled "A Bio-Friendly Universe?"
Davies writes: "The ramifications of finding life elsewhere
in the cosmos are ... profound in the extreme. They transcend
mere science, and impact on such philosophical issues as whether
there is a meaning to physical existence, or whether life, the
universe and everything are ultimately pointless and absurd."
According to Davies, if living things are found on other planets
it proves that life could not have formed simply by accident or
chance but that there is a "built-in bias towards life and
mind" and therefore a purpose and a God. But if science does
discover in the future that life appears to be present in the
universe more often than we might expect by pure chance, the task
of scientists is to reveal the underlying physical mechanisms
and laws. To appeal to religion is simply to relinquish the task.
Ironically Davies quotes the Roman philosopher and poet Lucretius
of the 1st Century BC and dismisses his arguments. In the essentials,
Lucretius, who understood that life was a product of matter, was
far closer to the truth than Davies, who with the benefit of 2,000
years of scientific development beckons us into the bog of mysticism.
What Lucretius wrote still rings true:
If atom stocks are inexhaustible,
Greater than power of living things to count,
If Nature's same creative power were present too
To throw the atoms into unions--exactly as united now,
Why then confess you must
That other worlds exist in other regions of the sky,
And different tribes of men, kinds of wild beasts.
See Also:
The Mind of God:
Science and the search for ultimate meaning
By Paul Davies
A descent into mysticism
[23 September 1994]
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