Can synthetic biology shed light on the origins of life?

Malaterre, C (2009). « Can synthetic biology shed light on the origins of life? ». Biological Theory, 4(4), pp. 357-367.

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Résumé

It is a most commonly accepted hypothesis that life originated from inanimate matter, somehow being a synthetic product of organic aggregates, and as such a result of some sort of prebiotic synthetic biology. In the past decades, the newly formed scientific discipline of synthetic biology has set ambitious goals by pursuing the complete design and production of genetic circuits, entire genomes, or even whole organisms. I argue that synthetic biology might also shed some novel and interesting perspectives on the question of the origins of life, and that, in addition, it might challenge our most commonly accepted definitions of life, thereby changing the ways we might think about life and its origins.

Type: Article de revue scientifique
Mots-clés ou Sujets: definition of life, origins of life, prebiotic chemistry, synthetic biology
Unité d'appartenance: Faculté des sciences humaines > Département de philosophie
Déposé par: Christophe Malaterre
Date de dépôt: 17 avr. 2026 08:19
Dernière modification: 17 avr. 2026 08:19
Adresse URL : https://archipel.uqam.ca/secure/id/eprint/19915

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