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by pfdietz
1227 days ago
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> it seems like they are practically inevitable once those conditions exist Given that we have exactly one occurrence of Origin of Life, how did you conclude this? From life originating quickly on Earth once it had cooled enough? That could be explained by the conditions in which life might originate not persisting for very long after a planet forms. |
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We seem to find amino acids everywhere. It seems like once conditions exist that they can form, they DO form.
We don't have any equivalent building block which is anywhere nearly so ubiquitous.
In addition, these building blocks are reversible within 3kcal/mol. Life requires reversibility. http://wavefunction.fieldofscience.com/2008/10/unbearable-he...
We have no other building blocks with this kind of versatility. None.
So, life may not be based on DNA/RNA, but it's almost certain to be based around amino acids.