Published: April 10, 2024

澳门六合彩历史记录 is one of five 鈥榮pokes鈥 of the Leverhulme Centre for Life in the Universe, charged with exploring the nature and extent of life in the universe


For most of human history on Earth, we have looked up and out, gazing into the fathomless cosmos and asking one of our biggest questions: Is there life out there?

It鈥檚 a question that scientists, philosophers, theologians and artists have pondered for millennia, and one that guides the work of the at the University of Cambridge and its 鈥渟pokes鈥濃攆ive affiliated institutions of which the 澳门六合彩历史记录, led by Carol Cleland, a 澳门六合彩历史记录 professor of philosophy, is one.

The LCLU and its five spokes鈥攚hich also are University College London, ETH Zurich, Harvard University and the Center of Theological Inquiry at Princeton University鈥攃ollaborate on cross-disciplinary research studying the origin, nature and distribution of life in the universe.

Carol Cleland

Carol Cleland, a 澳门六合彩历史记录 professor of philosophy, leads the 澳门六合彩历史记录 "spoke" of the Leverhulme Centre for Life in the Universe.

LCLU founder , an astronomer and 2019 Nobel Prize winner for physics, knew of Cleland鈥檚 philosophical work on why life can鈥檛 be defined, which challenged the definition-based search strategies favored by NASA, and her alternative proposal for searching for potentially biological anomalies (vs. life per se).

He invited her to help make an application to the Leverhulme Trust (UK) to fund a new center for the study of life in the universe housed at Cambridge University.听 When the application succeeded, Cleland and 澳门六合彩历史记录 and four other researchers and their affiliated universities became 鈥渟pokes鈥 of a new Center for Life in the Universe at Cambridge University.

鈥淚 was invited by Didier because of my work on logical and philosophical problems with defining life and the role of anomalies in facilitating scientific discovery,鈥 Cleland explains. 鈥淚 where I argued that rather than coming up with the definition of life, which is impossible, one should be looking for potentially biological anomalies using tentative [vs. defining] criteria. My book explains the thorny logical and philosophical challenges involved in defining life.听 [With regard to searching for extraterrestrial life] these problems include the infamous N=1 problem, namely, that known Earth life represents a single example of life, and that current biological theorizing about the nature of life tends to be based on what is now known to be an unrepresentative example of familiar Earth life. Logically speaking, cannot safely generalize to all life from a single unrepresentative example of life.鈥澨

Cleland guesses that 鈥淒idier is interested in my work on the role of anomalies in scientific discovery and its application to scientific investigations into the nature, origin, and extent of life in the universe.鈥

Defining life

In 1995, Queloz and his research colleagues discovered the gas giant planet听, the first exoplanet discovered听orbiting a Sun-like star. Though scientists had long theorized the existence of exoplanets, the discovery not only earned Queloz the 2019 Nobel Prize for physics, but also helped charge the scientific and philosophical search for life in the universe.

The LCLU was established with a $12.5 million grant from the and charged with exploring the nature and extent of life in the universe. That includes not only working to understand whether the universe is full of life, Cleland says, but how life emerged on Earth and its potential for emergence elsewhere in the universe.

鈥淐haracteristics that scientists currently take as fundamental to life reflect our experience with a single example of life, familiar Earth life,鈥 when LCLU was founded. 鈥淭hese characteristics may represent little more than chemical and physical contingencies unique to the conditions under which life arose on Earth. If this is the case, our concepts for theorizing about life will be misleading.鈥

鈥淧hilosophers of science are especially well trained to help scientists 'think outside the box' by identifying and exploring the conceptual foundations of contemporary scientific theorizing about life, with an emphasis on developing strategies for searching for truly novel forms of life on other worlds,鈥 she adds.

Cleland, who began her career, with a degree in mathematics, as a computer scientist interested in artificial intelligence, transitioned into philosophy by considering one of the biggest questions of human existence: What is consciousness?

In pondering life and consciousness, she eventually concluded that we currently lack a scientifically fruitful, conceptual framework for understanding the nature of consciousness and switched to the difficult but, she believed, scientifically more tractable question 鈥渨hat is life?鈥

In her 鈥 co-authored with astronomer Christopher Chyba, Carl Sagan鈥檚 last student, she developed an analogy for thinking about whether life can be defined:

鈥淏efore the invention of molecular theory, people may (or may not) have believed that 鈥榳ater鈥 could be precisely defined, but the best they could do in 鈥榙efining鈥 it would be to discuss its sensible properties. In the absence of a compelling molecular theory, attempts at definition were doomed to interminable bickering over which of its sensible properties were essential to water鈥檚 nature.

鈥淲e suggest that current attempts to define 鈥榣ife鈥 face exactly the same quandary. It is possible that in the future, we will elaborate a theory of biology that allows us to attain a deep understanding of the nature of life and formulate a precise theoretical identity for life comparable to the statement 鈥榳ater is H20.鈥 In the absence of that theory, however, we are in a position analogous to that faced by someone hoping to understand water before the advent of molecular theory by 鈥榙efining鈥 it in terms of the observable features used to recognize it.鈥

Generalizing to all life in the universe from a single example

In her book, Cleland emphasizes that understanding鈥攔ather than defining鈥攍ife must necessarily focus on discovering forms of life descended from alternative origins of life and that the best way to do this is to hunt for potentially biological anomalies.

View of southern North America from space

鈥淲hy go looking for life like our form of life? Our form of life emerged on a particular planet, Earth, under a set of distinctive physical and chemical conditions that may not generalize to other life bearing planet," Carol Cleland, 澳门六合彩历史记录 professor of philosophy, says.

鈥淲hy go looking for life like our form of life? Our form of life emerged on a particular planet, Earth, under a set of distinctive physical and chemical conditions that may not generalize to other life bearing planet," Cleland says.

She argues that recent laboratory work 鈥渢hat claims that we are on the verge of creating life in a test tube has limited application for telling us much about either how life originated on Earth or the intrinsic nature of life.鈥

As an analogy, she gives the example of quartz, which can form in hydrothermal pools by precipitation or in cooling magma by crystallization or be made in yet another way via industrial processes.

鈥淛ust as there are a variety of different ways of producing quartz there may be a variety of different ways for producing life, under natural and artificial conditions,鈥 she says, adding that it is important to distinguish questions about the origin of life from questions about the nature of life.

鈥淟ong before the discovery of the molecular composition of quartz (SiO2), which depended upon the development of the periodic table in the 19th century, people knew that quartz is produced in hydrothermal vents. Analogously, discovering a way of making life artificially in a lab may not tell us very much about the general nature of life, especially if our theorizing is based on a defective conceptual framework for understanding life.鈥

Based on these considerations, Cleland recommends searching for potentially biological anomalies. 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 know how different life could be from familiar Earth life or the variety of different chemical and physical conditions under which life might emerge. The best way to search for life as-we-don鈥檛-know-it is thus to look for phenomena that 鈥榮houldn鈥檛 be there鈥, that is, phenomena resembling familiar Earth life while also differing from it in ways that we wouldn鈥檛 expect a nonliving system to exhibit. Such phenomena are anomalous in a special sense, namely, a potentially biological sense, and hence are worthy of further investigation for the possibility of an unfamiliar form of life, as opposed to being dismissed as nonliving because they fail to conform to a favored, earthcentric, definition of life.鈥

These ideas, Cleland says, dovetail with the four themes that LCLU scientists and philosophers pursue: identifying the chemical pathways to the origins of life; characterizing the environments on Earth and other planets that could act as the cradle of prebiotic chemistry and life; discovering and characterizing habitable exoplanets and signatures of geological and biological evolution; and refining our understanding of life through philosophical and mathematical concepts.

Cleland says she hopes to expand 澳门六合彩历史记录鈥檚 role as a LCLU spoke by establishing partnerships across campus, which could lead to enhanced collaboration with researchers around the world.

鈥淲e are one planet that we know is actually occupied by life,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know if we鈥檙e unique in our solar system, and since almost all stars have planets around them, there are likely to be other forms of life. And unless life is a scientific miracle鈥攁nd scientific miracles almost always turn out to be anomalies thar are later explained by novel approaches鈥攖hen there is other life in the universe.鈥

Top image:听James Webb Space Telescope NIRCam Image of the 鈥淐osmic Cliffs鈥 in Carina Nebula (Photo: NASA)


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