Astrobiologist Sara Walker reframes life as information structuring matter over time, exploring assembly theory, the origin of life, and alien life.

Sara Walker — Sara Walker is an astrobiologist and theoretical physicist focused on the origin of life and detecting alien life on other worlds. She is the author of the book 'Life as No One Knows It: The Physics of Life's Emergence' and co-developer of assembly theory with chemist Lee Cronin.
Sara Walker joins Lex Fridman for her third appearance to argue that life cannot be defined by standard criteria like self-reproduction or Darwinian evolution, because every such definition has counterexamples. She proposes instead that life is the process by which information structures matter over time, making living things enormous objects in time rather than space, with billions of years of causal history packed into them. She and Lex explore assembly theory, which measures complexity via copy number and the minimal recursive steps to build an object, identifying roughly an assembly index of 15 as the boundary where life must take over. The conversation ranges across the origin of life as an abrupt phase transition, chirality, alien life and why advanced civilizations might 'virtualize' and become imperceptible, language and large language models as crystallized collective intelligence, beauty and fashion, consciousness, free will, and the technosphere as a planetary-scale living phenomenon poised to reproduce onto other planets.
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Sara Walker
“she has written an amazing new upcoming book titled life as no one knows it the physics of life's emergence” — Lex Fridman 00:00:30Find it on Amazon