Graham Cairns-Smith
Alexander Graham Cairns-Smith (born 1931) is an organic chemist and molecular biologist at the University of Glasgow. He is most famous for his controversial 1985 book, Seven Clues to the Origin of Life.
The book popularized a hypothesis he began to develop in the mid-1960s—that self-replication of clay crystals in solution might provide a simple intermediate step between biologically inert matter and organic life. He inspired other ideas about chemical evolution, including the Miller-Urey experiment and the RNA World, all of which are hypotheses that have greatly helped in explaining the origin of life.
Cairns-Smith also published on the evolution of consciousness, in Evolving the Mind (1996), favoring a role for quantum mechanics in human thought.
Read more about Graham Cairns-Smith: Clay Hypothesis, Extraterrestrial Biochemistry, Selected Publications
Famous quotes containing the word graham:
“Scatter my ashes, strew them in the air:
Lord since thou knowst where all these atoms are,
Im hopeful thoult recover once my dust,
And confident thoult raise me with the just.”
—James Graham Marquess of Montrose (16121650)