The Quintessence of Life

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Life… perhaps no more than just a figure of our own imaginations to explain the state of being in which everything exist. Even 3 billion years since the first appearance of living organisms on Earth, science still has yet to find out what the definition of life truly is; yet nevertheless, life is the most important aspect from which all other existence on this plant steams. Without the first life on earth, there would undoubtably be no “life” at all. Flash foreword into the modern era and the same question that has plagued science for centuries still continues to raise controversy. In order to understand the arguments of modern genetic species revival, one must go back and understand the mysterious beginnings of life on Earth, and examine how one species could have evolved into every single species known to exist on earth today. By seeing through the history one can understand the present, which gives a meaning to the phrase “the quintessence of life.”
As the origins of life on earth remain a mystery, scientists have found ample evidence that supports the claim that the first life on earth came in the form of a single celled bacteria around 3.5 billion years ago (Deamer 38). As many scientist have theorized, life is thought to have begun in vernal pools, areas of stagnant and warm waters near volcanic vents (Deamer 25). According to David Dreamer in his book First Life Discovering the Connections Between Stars, Cells, and How Life Began, through recent research and ancient oral traditions of native peoples in Russia, stories of vernal pools containing a sludge like substance peaked the curiosity of the scientific committee (24). Upon examination of these substances, scientists concluded the substances to be a combinati...

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...ich still remains today among the Catholic faith.

Works Cited

Darwin, Charles, and David Quammen. On the Origin of Species. New York: Sterling, 2008. Print.
Deamer, David. First life discovering the connections between stars, cells, and how life began. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011. Print.
Isaiah. The Common Worship Lectionary: New Revised Standard Version: Anglicized Edition. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1999. Print.
Leakey, Richard E., and Roger Lewin. The Sixth Extinction: Biodiversity and Its Survival. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1996. Print.
Pius XII. "Humani Generis." Humani Generis. The Holy See, 24 Nov. 2008. Web. 15 Apr. 2014.
Zimmer, Carl. "Bringing Them Back to Life." Good Reasons With Contemporary Arguments. 6th ed. Ed. Lester Faigley and Jack Selzer. San Francisco: Pearson, 2014. 445-451. Pearson eText. Web. 5 Feb. 20

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