The article argues that autopoietic, self‑maintaining dynamics can appear in nonliving physical systems and that this lens should inform origin‑of‑life research. It proposes using methods from cognitive science and philosophy of mind to study how lifelike behavior emerges from mindless substrates. This blurs the sharp line between life and nonlife and reframes abiogenesis as a behavioral transition, not only a chemical one.
— Redefining what counts as 'life‑like' changes astrobiology, bioethics, and consciousness debates by shifting attention from molecules to behaviors and systems.
Conor Feehly
2025.10.09
100% relevant
The piece cites Maturana and Varela’s 'autopoiesis' and urges applying mind‑science tools to origin‑of‑life puzzles beyond LUCA and the ponds‑vs‑vents divide.
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