This information theory of individuality offers a very general way to think about biological units. They hope it will inspire algorithms that could allow you to extract figure from ground, organism from environment. Such algorithms could be applied to streams of data collected over time to pinpoint correlations of information that signify the emergence of individuals.
Within this theory, individuals can be cells, tissues, organisms, colonies, companies, political institutions, online groups, artificial intelligence or cities — even ideas or theories. What we’re trying to do is discover a whole zoo of life forms that extend far beyond what we have conventionally called living,
Tag: science
Archaeology Dogs
“Some of the police cases Andrea has worked on are 30 years old. We both wondered how far back in time her dogs could smell.” What they did not expect was that the dogs would lead them to remains buried 2.8 ka BP
Chirality
Cosmic rays may explain life’s bias for right-handed DNA
Ultimately, the fact that researchers struggle to find a theory that balances the rise of chirality against the destruction of biological materials suggests that our ancestors may have been lucky to find that fine line. There is something special about planets like the Earth that protect this kind of chemistry.
2021-08-02: More details on this astounding achievement. They were able to sequence a 1.5 kilobase chiral DNA plus the Pasteur encoding stunt.
The chirally inverted L-DNA, possessing the same informational capacity but resistant to biodegradation, may serve as a robust, bioorthogonal information repository. Here we chemically synthesize a 90-kDa high-fidelity mirror-image Pfu DNA polymerase that enables accurate assembly of a kilobase-sized mirror-image gene. We use the polymerase to encode in L-DNA an 1860 paragraph by Louis Pasteur that first proposed a mirror-image world of biology. We realize chiral steganography by embedding a chimeric D-DNA/L-DNA key molecule in a D-DNA storage library, which conveys a false or secret message depending on the chirality of reading. Furthermore, we show that a trace amount of an L-DNA barcode preserved in water from a local pond remains amplifiable and sequenceable for 1 year, whereas a D-DNA barcode under the same conditions could not be amplified after 1 day.
2022-10-28: The same group doing the next step, a chiral RNA polymerase. This one is about 10% larger than previous work on the DNA polymerase as measured in kDA.
Zhu chemically synthesized a 100-kDA mirror-image T7 RNA polymerase, which enabled efficient and faithful transcription of high-quality l-RNAs as long as 2.9 kilobases. A massive, 883 amino acid protein, it lay well beyond the limits of traditional chemical synthesis. But an analysis of T7s x-ray crystal structure showed the enzyme could likely be split into 3 sections, each stitched from short segments. In solution, the fragments naturally folded into their proper 3D shapes and assembled themselves into a working T7.
The mirror-image RNAs fashioned by the polymerase were far more stable than the normal versions produced by a regular T7, because they were untouched by the naturally occurring RNA chewing enzymes that almost unavoidably contaminate such experiments and quickly destroy normal RNAs.
Now, Zhu needs to make the remaining components of a mirror-image ribosome. The 3 RNA fragments they synthesized make up 66% of the total mass of a ribosome. What remains are the 54 ribosomal proteins and several proteins that work in concert with the ribosome, all of which are smaller and thus likely easier to synthesize. Then the question is whether the full parts kit will assemble into a ribosome.
Even if they do, the resulting molecular machines might still not be functional. In order to churn out proteins, ribosomes must work in conjunction with a suite of additional helper proteins. To make this work inside a living cell, Church thinks it will be necessary to rewrite an organism’s genetic code so the engineered ribosome can recognize all those proteins, particularly the 20 that ferry amino acids for building new proteins.

2023-08-28: nonlinear optics to detect chirality
They have realized a technique that can completely distinguish enantiomers in solution in an all-optical manner: no chemical tags, no particular UV/VIS absorbance needed from the compound structures, etc. And it is extremely fast and extremely sensitive, as opposed to traditional methods like optical rotation, circular dichroism, etc.
2023-09-08: What about magnetism?
Magnetic surfaces on minerals in bodies of water on the primordial Earth, charged by the planet’s magnetic field, could have served as “chiral agents” that attracted some forms of molecules more than others, kicking off a process that amplified the chirality of biological molecules, from RNA precursors all the way to proteins and beyond. Their proposed mechanism would explain how a bias in the makeup of certain molecules could have cascaded outward to create a vast network of chiral chemistry supporting life.
It’s not the only plausible hypothesis, but “it’s one of the coolest because it ties geophysics to geochemistry, to prebiotic chemistry, and ultimately to biochemistry”
Primordial Magnetism
One possibility is that cosmic magnetism is primordial, tracing all the way back to the birth of the universe. In that case, weak magnetism should exist everywhere, even in the “voids” of the cosmic web — the very darkest, emptiest regions of the universe. The omnipresent magnetism would have seeded the stronger fields that blossomed in galaxies and clusters.
Hummingbird vision
The tests showed that the birds could see every nonspectral color that the researchers threw at them. Color pairs that were closer together in hue resulted in more mistaken visits but still beat the 50/50 odds of the control experiments. Even if the neural mechanisms for color vision were clear, and even if color-mixing experiments attest to avian tetrachromacy, we still could not answer the more philosophical question of what nonspectral colors really look like to birds. Does UV+green appear to birds as a mix of those colors (analogous to a double-stop chord played by a violinist) or as a sublime new color (analogous to a completely new tone unlike its components)? We cannot say.
Ettore Majorana
Today, this mathematical curiosity of 1932 still represents a powerful source of new ideas. In this paper there are the first hints for supersymmetry, spin-mass correlation and spontaneous symmetry breaking – 3 fundamental concepts underpinning the Standard Model and beyond. Our understanding of the fundamental laws of nature was already in Majorana’s attempts to describe particles with arbitrary spins in a relativistically invariant way.
SETI Limits
there should be at least 36 civilizations within our Galaxy: this is a lower limit, based on the assumption that the average life-time, L, of a communicating civilization is 100 years. If spread uniformly throughout the Galaxy this would imply that the nearest CETI is at most 17K light-years away, and most likely hosted by a low-mass M-dwarf star, far surpassing our ability to detect it for the foreseeable future
Por-Bajin
In Mongolia, a mysterious island ruin Is giving up its secrets. It is now possible to combine tree rings with atmospheric carbon dating to get to yearly precision.
Simplest Animal
Despite having the simplest bodies of all animals, placozoans carry many of the same genes as humans do, including numerous genes involved in building brains and other complex organs, like those in the digestive system. Placozoans contain far more genetic complexity than scientists ever guessed. “The question is, what are they doing with it?”
80% not susceptible to COVID-19?
His models suggest that the stark difference between outcomes in the UK and Germany is not primarily an effect of different government actions (such as better testing and earlier lockdowns) but is better explained by intrinsic differences between the populations that make the “susceptible population” in Germany — the group that is vulnerable to Covid-19 — much smaller than in the UK.
Even within the UK, the numbers point to the same thing: that the “effective susceptible population” was never 100%, and was at most 50% and probably more like only 20% of the population. He emphasises that the analysis is not yet complete, but “I suspect, once this has been done, it will look like the effective non-susceptible portion of the population will be 80%.”