Quantum Evolution: Life in the Multiverse. Johnjoe McFadden
grow. A mountain may grow (if you wait long enough), or a fire may grow. However, a mountain is pushed up by plate tectonics; a fire increases if the temperature of surrounding flammable material exceeds the temperature needed to ignite the material. In both these cases, the growth is in response to exterior forces. Neither possesses the ability to initiate autonomous actions. In contrast, the acorn initiates the process, culminating in the generation of a mature oak tree: it is a directed action. If we filmed the growth of an acorn and replayed the film, speeding the action so that the tree’s entire life took just a few minutes, then we would see the oak appearing to raise itself up from the forest floor – in defiance of gravity – propelling itself towards the sunlight. This ability to move against external forces is a fundamental property of life, one lost when life is lost. If we continued to run the film of our oak tree for many years, we would observe that eventually the tree would no longer sprout new growth in the spring; it would remain leafless and eventually it would lose the ability to defy gravity, falling to the forest floor.
Somehow, whilst an organism remains alive, it is able to resist external forces and perform directed actions. When a pigeon perched on a tree decides to fly, its directed action is to beat its wings, thereby creating the turbulence that lifts it up into the air. Although inanimate objects may similarly perform actions, they lack the ability to direct them. Consider a stick of dynamite. In a sense, it can perform an action by exploding and may similarly get lifted into the air. Is the dynamite any different from the bird? Yes it is. If we determined the chemical composition of the dynamite and then added the exterior forces acting upon it, we could predict the dynamite’s subsequent behaviour and the effect on its environment. We could predict when it would explode. The dynamite cannot direct its action. Its behaviour is entirely deterministic.
Determinism is one of the bedrocks of classical science. It is the principle that the future (or present) state of any system (say, the stick of dynamite) is determined solely by its past. If you know the precise configuration of any system, by adding in the laws of physics and chemistry, you can calculate its future behaviour. The principle is at the heart of Newtonian mechanics, allowing astronomers to calculate the movement of planets from their known positions and trajectories and so forecast the precise times of solar and lunar eclipses far into the future (or back into the past). It is of course entirely impractical to determine the precise positions of all particles for anything other than the simplest systems but, in principle, determinism should reign – we should be able to predict when the dynamite would explode from knowledge of existing conditions. There is nothing that the dynamite can do, no action it can take, that would affect when it is likely to explode. It does not possess the ability to direct its own actions.
However, if we similarly determined the pigeon’s precise chemical composition and added the prevailing temperature, wind conditions, etc., could we predict that it would fly up into the air? Perhaps. But then, suppose it spied a bag of seed on the ground. It would then be more likely to descend towards the food. But perhaps there is a cat nearby. The pigeon might decide to wait in the tree until the cat has crept away. Could we predict all these possible behaviours by analysing the chemistry of the pigeon alone or even that of the pigeon and its surrounding environment? The only differences which have led to the pigeon’s altered behaviour are the pattern of light photons that fell upon its retina (carrying the images of food, cat, etc.). If we include these photons in the equations of motion that describe the pigeon and its environment, would the equations predict such widely different outcomes?
I hope to convince you that the answer to this question is no. We cannot account for life with classical science alone. In particular, we cannot account how living creatures are able to direct their actions according to their own internal agenda. For higher animals, such as ourselves, we call this ability our will. The ability to will actions is a profoundly puzzling aspect to living organisms that appears to contradict scientific determinism. There is no role for will in determinism; we do not have choices. Every action that we perform should be determined, not by any decision we make but by the precise molecular configuration of our bodies at the time preceding our action.
So can living creatures will actions? In subsequent chapters, we will explore how all actions, at a molecular level, involve the motion of fundamental particles. Different actions will involve entirely different sets of movements of these particles. For a bird to decide to soar into the air, it must change the direction of motion of billions of particles within its body. This capability to direct motion in response to an internal will appears to escape classical determinism, and is why biological systems are so unpredictable. Its influence may even be carried over into our interactions with our surroundings. The stick of dynamite would become just as unpredictable as the pigeon, if a man was standing close by, armed with a length of lighted touch-paper. Our directed actions cause the movement of particles both within our bodies and in our surroundings.
I should emphasize at the outset that I will not be invoking any mysterious forces to account for our will, only the known laws of physics and chemistry. I am not suggesting any return to vitalism. Over the coming chapters we will explore how all biological phenomena – mobility, metabolism, respiration, photosynthesis, replication and evolution – involves the motion of fundamental particles. We will examine how these dynamics are governed, not by classical physics, but by the non-deterministic laws of quantum mechanics. At its most fundamental level, life is a quantum phenomenon. We will go on to explore the implications of this realization for our understanding of life’s origin, its nature, evolution and consciousness. I hope, by the end of this book, you will have a new and exciting insight into what it means to be alive.
The makers of this alien spacecraft would hardly be content with one bulletin on a rock pigeon’s flying capabilities. After its first report the spacecraft would explore further – to seek out new life – in the words of Star Trek. Its next task would be to discover what the phenomenon of life on earth actually is. What does it need? Where does it thrive? What are its limits?
THE INGREDIENTS OF LIFE
Our spacecraft would soon discover that all life on Earth is carbon-based, that carbon is the key ingredient of our biomolecules. We might also describe life as water-based, since water is the substrate for our cells and tissue fluids, taking an active role in most of life’s activities. Life’s other main chemical ingredients are hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen and small quantities of minerals such as calcium, magnesium, iron and sulfur.
These are readily available in our biosphere. Water is in the sea, in rivers, streams and lakes and, of course, rains frequently down upon us. Carbon is found in both inorganic molecules like carbon dioxide (CO2)1, methane (CH4) or calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and as organic2 forms such as the sugars, fats or proteins derived from the bodies of other living organisms. Hydrogen and oxygen are available in inorganic forms such as water (H2O) or as a component of organic compounds. Similarly, nitrogen is available in inorganic nitrogen gas (N2), ammonia (NH3), nitrates and nitrites, and in organic compounds. Animals are unable to utilize the inorganic forms of most of these, obtaining the elements they need from organic sources – the bodies of dead plants and animals.
Life would not have progressed far on our planet if all organisms were as feeble in their synthetic capabilities as animals. Fortunately plants and microbes are much more versatile. Billions of years ago, photosynthetic bacteria3 developed the trick of extracting carbon from the carbon dioxide in the air and stringing together the carbon atoms to make simple sugars. This is not easy; in fact, photosynthesis is one of the trickiest chemical reactions we know of (we will be looking at it more closely in Chapter Five). The problem is that the carbon atoms in carbon dioxide prefer to be attached to oxygen rather than tied to each other to make complex biochemicals such as sugars or proteins. To persuade carbon atoms to form complex