InfoCoBuild

Life in the Universe

Complexity and Evolvability: What Makes Life so Interesting? - Professor Anna Dornhaus. Life is particularly fascinating in its ability to create complex and ever-changing forms out of simple building blocks. How does such complexity arise, and what are the conditions that allow never-ending evolution of new and more intricate forms of life? We now know that one of the main processes that allows this is that life consists of modules that interact with and feed back on one another. In the history of life on Earth, new levels of complexity have often arisen out of new types of such interactions, and continued evolution has been driven by life interacting with other life. We even find that man-made systems can develop a 'life' of their own when such feedback interactions among many modules occur. Life, it seems, is more about rules of interaction than special materials. We have only begun to understand the power of this algorithmic nature of life.

Complexity and Evolvability: What Makes Life so Interesting?


Go to the Series Home or watch other lectures:

1. What is Life?
2. Planet Formation and the Origin of Life
3. Life on Earth: By Chance or by Law?
4. Complexity and Evolvability: What Makes Life so Interesting?
5. Searching for Life in the Solar System
6. Amazing Discoveries: A Billion Earth-like Worlds
7. Intelligent Life Beyond Earth