Survivalist Pro
Photo: Antoni Shkraba
All life forms share at least one essential purpose: survival. This is even more important than another key purpose for life, reproduction. Plenty of organisms, after all, are alive but do not reproduce. To be alive is more than passing genes along to the next generation.
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Read More »Before I jump into this essay, let’s clarify what I mean here by “purpose.” It is best to start with what I do not mean. I am not talking about a sense of purpose in our private lives, our personal choices and hopes, and the plans we make along the years. I hope, of course, that each of us lives with a sense that our life does have a purpose, even if this sense is sometimes elusive and fragmented. But what I mean to discuss here is the purpose of life, of biology as a natural phenomenon — this strange assembly of matter endowed with autonomy, capable of absorbing energy from the environment and of multiplying itself through reproduction.
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Read More »This conclusion is false. There is no plan to make life more complex so that it can finally generate intelligent beings. (Eminent biologist Ernst Mayr makes a powerful argument against teleology here.) An animal’s adaptation is not a plan devised before it mutates. Mutations do not have a plan. Take the dinosaurs, for example. They were here for some 150 million years. Clearly, they were, with their various mutations and branches, very well adapted to their environment. Life wants to preserve itself, and it will struggle to do so for as long as it can. If the environment changes drastically, life will respond. Sometimes it will die, but for the species that survive, mutations may drive radical changes in short periods of time, as in the punctuated equilibrium hypothesis of Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldridge. That hypothesis is somewhat controversial, but it seems to contain a germ of truth. If we changed one or more of the dramatic events in Earth’s history — say, the cataclysmic impact of the asteroid that helped eliminate the dinosaurs 66 million years ago — life’s history on Earth would also change. We probably would not be here asking about life’s purpose. The lesson from life is simple: In Nature, creation and destruction dance together. But there is no choreographer. The randomness of life makes it even more extraordinary that it evolved to include a species capable of asking about its own origins.
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