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The Los Alamos Bug

Kannappan writes "'You somehow have to forget everything you know about life', says Steen Rasmussen, a colleague of Norman Packard. Packard and his team are working on creating life artificially, nicknamed The Los Alamos bug (pdf). It will be created out of a molecule called Peptide Nucleic Acid(PNA), with a blend of three different factors crucial to life, viz. containment, heredity and metabolism. The researchers believe that the synthetic lives so created will have an enormous practical value in producing clean fuels, healing injured bodies and acting as tiny diagnosticians roaming our bodies."

4 of 389 comments (clear)

  1. Focus on Artificial life by saurabhdutta · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    My thoughts are that wont it be better to focus efforts for building artificial life on increasing computational intelligence. Seriously... what good the creation of a bug do to humanity? If the same brainpower is chanellised into creating intelligent machines, the benefit humanity gains, is immense.

  2. Re:Scientists need to stop playing God! by stoneymonster · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Have the invention of antibiotics, modern farming techniques, medical diagnostic imaging, genetic therapy, high-speed communications, transportation, etc. taught us nothing? Man should spend more time being dirt farmers than trying to improve his own lot in the universe.

  3. Re:Source of creation, or evolution? by Sheepdot · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Does this experiment do anything to address that question? Do biologists have any ideas on how it happened?

    Abiogenesis is a hypothesis that stated that life may be able to be made from non-life. This, of course, goes against the Laws of Biogenesis, and is a fundamental tenet of Atheism. While having never been observed, it is claimed to be falsifiable, scientists just keep trying and believe that one day they'll eventually "get it".

  4. To Be Seen At Nova PBS by Quirk · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    A recent segment of Nova dealt with this and can be watched online.

    What bugged me was that at the intro to the episode the narrator, a bad comic if I've ever seen one and an anchor dragging down a once good program, spoke of the work as the greatest work since creation. The ceiling of the Sistine Chapel was then flashed on the screen showing the 'Creator's' hand outstreached to the reaching hand of his creation, Adam. IMO it stank of lip service to the American fundamentalist neoconservatives.

    --
    "Academicians are more likely to share each other's toothbrush than each other's nomenclature."
    Cohen