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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 2000 Volume 170, Number 2, Pages 157–183 (Mi ufn1706)

This article is cited in 61 papers

REVIEWS OF TOPICAL PROBLEMS

The origin of life and thinking from the viewpoint of modern physics

D. S. Chernavskii

P. N. Lebedev Physical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

Abstract: Attempts at a physical picture of how living creatures emerge from nonliving matter are beset with difficulties due to a low probability of some of the stages of the process. It is shown that these difficulties arise from the misconstruction of the term 'coding' and that they are overcome by assuming that the polynucleotide catalized rather than 'coded' the formation of protein in primary organisms (hypercycles). A realistic scenario including the emergence of a unified code is considered for such a process. A physical mechanism of thinking and the basis of a necessary evolutionary change are discussed, for which purpose the concepts of information, valuable information, and information generation are analyzed. It is shown that thinking reduces largely to pattern recognition. A possible molecular mechanism of recognition is considered which is shown to be quite likely to have appeared in the course of evolution.

PACS: 87.10.+e, 87.15.-v, 87.90.+y, 89.70.+c

Received: May 26, 1999

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0170.200002c.0157


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 2000, 43:2, 151–176

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