- Mar 16, 2004
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Where does he claim that we will get a 'recapitulation of the origin of life?'
In an interview on his bio page at Harvard.
What people are working on most of all is to find plausible explanations for the origin of life. Clearly people would like to know how life actually got started on Earth, but it is entirely possible that we will never find that out because too much evidence has not been preserved.
Well the RNA world hypothesis isn't plausible, because it would have had to survive in the primordial seas, temperatures were far too high. There was no Darwinian warm little pond and certainly nothing like catalytic RNA. You can't just look at how life works and call that an explanation for how life originated. Recapitulation has always been a logical fallacy, it begs the question of proof.
How close are we to finding plausible explanations of how life started? I'd say reasonably close. We have explanations at a high level of detail. We just need to be able to create more detailed versions of them.
I'd say it's little more then a popular fantasy:
“I, for one, have never subscribed to this view of the origin of life, and I am by no means alone. The RNA world hypothesis is driven almost entirely by the flow of data from very high technology combinatorial libraries, whose relationship to the prebiotic world is anything but worthy of “unanimous support”. There are several serious problems associated with it, and I view it as little more than a popular fantasy” (reviewer's report in [Primordial soup or vinaigrette: did the RNA world evolve at acidic pH?] The RNA world hypothesis: the worst theory of the early evolution of life (except for all the others) Biol Direct. 2012.
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