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The Explosion of Life Forms


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      We know today that, while genes define the major parameters of the form of living beings, the essential part, the definitive shape, is constituted by the almighty processes of epigenesis. Jonathan B. Weitzman leads us along these astonishing embryological paths which, going beyond the genetic basis, lead, in successive stages, to the generation of form in the developing embryo. Today, much is known about the epigenetic mechanisms by which environmental signals and genetic characteristics are integrated and contribute to the formation of beautiful forms, underlying the epigenetic landscape so dear to Waddington’s heart.

      The very original world of protists and bacteria is presented to us by Guillermo Paz-y-Miño-C and Avelina Espinosa. The numerous strategies by which these beings detect and communicate with each other to survive and develop offer striking examples of the explosion of forms at the microscopic level. These processes also provide a better understanding of the evolutionary strategies involved in the transformation of forms, such as inclusive selective value, whose adaptive success is due to direct descendants but also to kin selection.

      Forms are not only manifested in the architecture of living beings, but also, particularly in animals, in their performances and achievements. Robert Jaffard addresses one of the most central performances of the psyche: memory. He analyzes the different forms of memory that allow an individual to adapt its behavior to the constraints and changes in its environment. Ranging from the simple phenomenon of habituation present in invertebrates to the highly sophisticated ability to form memories, these different forms of memory are juxtaposed as the nervous system becomes more complex.

      Another area that contributes, in an essential way, to the performance of animals is that of sensory universes, of which Dalila Bovet offers us a detailed overview. Chemical sensitivities such as taste or smell, mechanical sensitivities such as touch or hearing, electromagnetic sensitivities such as vision, but also electrical, magnetic or thermal sensitivities; here are some of the innumerable sensory forms that have enabled animals to develop such particularly complex behaviors.

      Beyond living beings, robots are built by human beings on basics inspired by living forms. In particular, they possess very interesting social and emotional forms, which Laurence Devillers explains. She shows that, although these forms are simulated, we “anthropomorphize” the behavior of machines. We imagine living things in artificial forms. She therefore explains the need to talk about ethics and transparency in the design of these machines that non-experts are far from understanding, and who could easily manipulate us.

      On a more general and philosophical level, Georges Chapouthier wonders whether, despite their extreme diversity, biological forms (both anatomical and mental), and consequently man-made technological forms, which have a common origin, might not also have common principles of construction. According to him, all forms of life or systems that mimic life would indeed result from the repeated application of two main principles: juxtaposition of similar units; and then integration of these units to form more complex structures, of which the original units then become parts. Just as in a mosaic, the new complex structures (the “whole”) then leave a degree of autonomy to the parts that make them up.

      The book ends with a philosophical reflection by Jean-Michel Besnier on the very role of “form” in our 21st Century society. The current trend seems to be to forget form and replace it with a fluid potentiality where “nothing remains, everything evolves and offers itself to mutations and transformations”. From this perspective, almighty “information” does not just aim to complement form. It aims, according to some authors, to totally replace it with “power”, “a process that has gotten rid of formal conditions”. Besnier analyzes and underlines the dangers of this process, a triumph of blind technology, supported by transhumanist, often catastrophist currents, where “power finally escapes the mind, that is to say, human control”. Through this “deformation”, “the absence of form is equivalent to violence and death”.

      This superb conclusion gives all its relevance and all its legitimacy to our work, which is, as we have seen, a plea, with multiple voices, for the living form “in all its forms”, but also, as a consequence and by the same token, a profound plea for life itself.

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      Possible Traces and Clues of Early Life Forms

       Marie-Christine MAUREL

       ISYEB-CNRS-MNHN, Sorbonne University, Paris, France

      “The pivotal question of the living ... is that of morphogenesis.”

      Claude Bernard, 1878

      Since its formation 4.5 billion years ago, the Earth has occupied a unique place in the solar system. The presence of liquid water, the first cradle of life, on 70% its surface is one of the major features of its appearance: 90% of life’s history has taken place in water and we still ask ourselves numerous questions about its formation today.

      Around 3.85 billion years ago, mineral matter and organic matter intertwined to produce, by chemical reactions, the amino acids of proteins, the constituents of the nucleic acids RNA and DNA (nitrogenous bases, sugars, phosphates), and all sorts of blocks that contributed to the design of the matrix of living things. Less than a billion years after the accretion of our planet, the elementary building blocks of biological molecules were thus formed on the primitive Earth. Today, life is omnipresent, covering the entire planet and its systems, at all latitudes, including our skin and our digestive tract, inhabited by thousands of bacteria species.

      And diversity also manifests itself over time: nowadays, we no longer find pithecanthropes, lepidodendrons, tyrannosaurs, ammonite trilobites,