4.6 Article

Searching for Life, Mindful of Lyfe's Possibilities

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life12060783

Keywords

habitability; origin of life; astrobiology; biosignatures; genesity; lyfe

Funding

  1. Carnegie Institution for Science's Carnegie Fellowship

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We are entering a new era of astrobiology, where missions and telescopes are being designed and launched with the explicit goal of finding evidence of extraterrestrial life. Scientists need to exercise caution and responsibility when interpreting and disseminating results. There is a need to establish standards for evidence and reporting of biosignatures. Additionally, the study of life detection is closely linked to our understanding of what life is, the origins of life, and habitability. These questions should not be overlooked but should be seen as interconnected and furthered together. The concept of "genesity" is proposed as a more comprehensive characterization of habitability to include forms of life unknown to us.
We are embarking on a new age of astrobiology, one in which numerous interplanetary missions and telescopes will be designed, built, and launched with the explicit goal of finding evidence for life beyond Earth. Such a profound aim warrants caution and responsibility when interpreting and disseminating results. Scientists must take care not to overstate (or over-imply) confidence in life detection when evidence is lacking, or only incremental advances have been made. Recently, there has been a call for the community to create standards of evidence for the detection and reporting of biosignatures. In this perspective, we wish to highlight a critical but often understated element to the discussion of biosignatures: Life detection studies are deeply entwined with and rely upon our (often preconceived) notions of what life is, the origins of life, and habitability. Where biosignatures are concerned, these three highly related questions are frequently relegated to a low priority, assumed to be already solved or irrelevant to the question of life detection. Therefore, our aim is to bring to the fore how these other major astrobiological frontiers are central to searching for life elsewhere and encourage astrobiologists to embrace the reality that all of these science questions are interrelated and must be furthered together rather than separately. Finally, in an effort to be more inclusive of life as we do not know it, we propose tentative criteria for a more general and expansive characterization of habitability that we call genesity.

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