Selection in molecular evolution
- PMID: 39137534
- DOI: 10.1016/j.shpsa.2024.07.004
Selection in molecular evolution
Abstract
Evolution requires selection. Molecular/chemical/preDarwinian evolution is no exception. One molecule must be selected over another for molecular evolution to occur and advance. Evolution, however, has no goal. The laws of physics have no utilitarian desire, intent or proficiency. Laws and constraints are blind to "usefulness." How then were potential multi-step processes anticipated, valued and pursued by inanimate nature? Can orchestration of formal systems be physico-chemically spontaneous? The purely physico-dynamic self-ordering of Chaos Theory and irreversible non-equilibrium thermodynamic "engines of disequilibria conversion" achieve neither orchestration nor formal organization. Natural selection is a passive and after-the-fact-of-life selection. Darwinian selection reduces to the differential survival and reproduction of the fittest already-living organisms. In the case of abiogenesis, selection had to be 1) Active, 2) Pre-Function, and 3) Efficacious. Selection had to take place at the molecular level prior to the existence of non-trivial functional processes. It could not have been passive or secondary. What naturalistic mechanisms might have been at play?
Keywords: Abiogenesis; Chemical evolution; Emergence; Life origin; Molecular evolution; Natural selection; Nonequilibrium thermodynamics; Pre-Darwinian evolution; Self-organization.
Copyright © 2024 The Author. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The author declares that he has no known competing financial.interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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