The Origins Lecture Series continues next week with the Origin of Life by series founder and chair of the division of biological sciences, Mark Farmer:
The origin of life remains one of the great unsolved mysteries in all of science. Late in life Charles Darwin speculated that life may have begun in “a warm little pond” but today we think it more likely that the earliest life forms emerged in the dark depths of the early Earth’s oceans. Even the simplest of cells is marvelously complex and for this reason there are those who feel that such complexity could not have arisen from natural processes. In this lecture we will explore the transition from complex biochemistry to simple cells and offer explanations as to how the first free-living life forms emerged to eventually give rise to the riot of complex organisms we find today.
7 p.m., Wednesday the 20th. These have all been a hit so far and this one promises to be no different. Get to the chapel early.