Nature trail A physicist turns his hand to life science, to explore how commonly held models of why we're here are wildly oversimplified
The Guardian Weekly|January 19, 2024
You might think, with the completion of the Human Genome Project more than 20 years ago, and the discovery of the double helix enjoying its 70th birthday last year, that we actually know how life works. In physics, the quest for a so-called Grand Unifying Theory has preoccupied the most ambitious minds for generations, alas to no avail. But in the life sciences, we managed to find four grand unifying theories in the space of 100 years or so.
Adam Rutherford
Nature trail A physicist turns his hand to life science, to explore how commonly held models of why we're here are wildly oversimplified

Three are well known: cell theory - all life is made of cells, which only come from existing cells; Darwin's evolution by natural selection; and universal genetics - all life is encoded by a cypher written in the molecule DNA. The fourth, no less important, goes by the chewy name chemiosmosis, and describes the way that all living things live by drawing fuel from their surroundings and using it in a continuous chemical reaction. In summary, life, made of cells that extract energy from their environment, comes modified from what came before.

Job done; suck it, physicists! However, biology is messy, and people like me remain gainfully employed because our understanding of how chemistry becomes biology is far from complete. These grand unifying ideas lack detail, and in biology the devil lies at a molecular level of complexity that is hard to understand. Nowhere, as Philip Ball (a physicist by background) points out in his excellent book, was this more starkly apparent than when an invisible virus turned the world upside down in 2020, killing millions, infecting many more.

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