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Scientists Developed Artificial Structures That Can Self-Replicate

First time accepted submitter mphall21 writes "New York University scientists have developed artificial structures that can self-replicate, a process that has the potential to yield new types of materials. In the natural world, self-replication is ubiquitous in all living entities, but artificial self-replication has been elusive. The new discovery is the first steps toward a general process for self-replication of a wide variety of arbitrarily designed seeds."

3 of 127 comments (clear)

  1. Good news... by GuJiaXian · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...they've created an artificial structure that can self-replicate. The bad news is that it's Ice-9.

  2. Artificial? by Hentes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They took DNA, a natural structure that can replicate, and modified it without breking that property. I wouldn't call it artificial self-replication.

  3. From a Biological Perspective We're Probably Fine by RobinEggs · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I see the first five responses were about science fiction scenarios in which nanomachines destroyed human life.

    All that's really necessary to prevent the machines from getting out of control, however, is to design them with some chemical dependencies. If it needs gold or it can only incorporate carbon from certain uncommon molecules to grow then it can't get very far. Plus, natural selection will be true in part with any self-replicating thing. If they get out they'll have to struggle for resources just like any other form of life. There isn't any reason to automatically assume they'll be better at it simply because they're artificial.

    There are even scenarios in which it might be nice to design nanomechanical organisms with the express purpose of setting them free; I'd sure like an organism that got along by fixing the carbon in carbon monoxide, the ozone in smog, and the nitrogen in nitrogen dioxide to replicate itself. It could make Los Angeles habitable again, and its reproduction would be limited to the rate at which we produce pollutants.