Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Non-biological ‘Paralife’ and Its Ongoing Transition Toward a New Form of Mechanical Life

Version 1 : Received: 16 November 2022 / Approved: 18 November 2022 / Online: 18 November 2022 (10:06:48 CET)

How to cite: Rice, W. Non-biological ‘Paralife’ and Its Ongoing Transition Toward a New Form of Mechanical Life. Preprints 2022, 2022110354. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202211.0354.v1 Rice, W. Non-biological ‘Paralife’ and Its Ongoing Transition Toward a New Form of Mechanical Life. Preprints 2022, 2022110354. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202211.0354.v1

Abstract

Here I describe an overlooked form of non-biological paralife (i.e., near-life) that has been evolving on Earth for millions of years, and is currently in the final stages of transitioning into a new form of life. Any consideration of non-biological life or paralife is complicated by the fact that there is no consensus among biologists for the definition of life. This ambiguity has caused disagreement about whether subcellular reproduction systems like viruses are a form of life, despite having genomes, mutations, heritable phenotypes and system-improving evolution. To resolve this problem, I develop a definition of life that is entirely functional and independent of any of the structural idiosyncrasies of biological life on Earth: an order-generating system controlled by internally-encoded information that perpetuates itself by functioning to counteract its entropic decay. Using this definition, subcellular transposons, plasmids, and viruses are paralife because they match the definition of life in all ways except that they induce their order-generating functioning by a living host rather through their own self-sustaining production system. Using this functional definition of life, I show that utility- products (UPs) like fabricated hand tools are part of induced-reproduction systems that have features equivalent to biological genomes, mutations, heritable phenotypes, and a process of system-improving evolution. The perceived benefit of utility-products causes them to induce their reproduction by a biological life-form (humans). For these reasons, human utility products are functionally just as close to being a form of life as subcellular transposons, plasmids, and viruses, i.e., they are Utility-Product paralife (UP-parlife). I also show that some forms of UP-paralife are currently evolving into mechanical life that is capable of both self- sustaining reproduction and system-improving evolution without outside assistance. This transition requires the development of a high level of factory and/or UP automation and artificial intelligence (AI) that is capable of complex reasoning, imagination and creativity. Finally, I consider the influence of UP-life and UP-paralife on the development of the level of structural complexity in the universe, and I briefly speculate about how these non-biological forms of life and paralife will influence the expansion of scientific knowledge about the universe.

Keywords

Definition of life; self-replicators; paralife; Utility-Product paralife; abiotic life; mechanical life; complexity

Subject

Biology and Life Sciences, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

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