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NASA Discovers Life (Again) How to Spot a
Metabolizing Lie in the Wild By the druid Finn NASA’s
official definition of life reads as follows: “Life is a self-sustaining
chemical system capable of Darwinian evolution.” There it
is. Forty-six words to describe what took the universe 13.8 billion years of non-touching
quantum misfires to cough into existence. A sentence so clean, so confident,
so profoundly metaphysical while pretending to be chemical that it deserves
to be carved into the hood of every Mars rover as a warning label. Let us be
generous for one paragraph. NASA wants something operational. Engineers need
a checklist. Fair enough. But what they have produced is not a neutral
detection tool. It is a provincial biological autobiography disguised as a
universal law. Translated
into honest English, NASA’s definition really says: “Life is
whatever behaves like us, but smaller, wetter, and ideally easier to
photograph.” 1. The First Hidden Assumption: Chemistry Is Reality’s
Native Language NASA
begins with “a chemical system.” This already smuggles in the entire Periodic
Table as the unquestioned metaphysical alphabet of existence. As if the
universe signed a treaty agreeing that carbon-based chemistry was the
official language of being. But under
Contact Realism, chemistry is not the foundation—it is a late, stabilized
misread of quantised non-contact. Atoms never touch. Molecules never
truly bond. They only displace each other across vacuum gaps and hallucinate
intimacy. So NASA’s definition quietly
assumes that: ·
Life must be made of the same optimized
misreads we are. ·
Any life that does not metabolize in familiar
molecular ways is dismissed as “non-life,” even if it actively responds,
reorganizes, and evolves its own non-chemical constraints. In short: NASA is not
searching for life. 2. The Second Hidden Assumption: “Self-Sustaining”
Equals “Separate from Reality” “Self-sustaining”
sounds heroic, until you realize it is just the fantasy of ontological
independence dressed up as biochemistry. Nothing is self-sustaining.
Every system is sustained by: ·
Energy gradients it did not design ·
Constraints it did not choose ·
Fields it did not invent Under
Contact Realism, there is no sovereign system. There are only nested,
mutually displacing quanta pretending to be autonomous. “Self-sustaining
life” is therefore not a fact—it is a pride story told by a subsystem that
has forgotten its dependence on structural error. 3. The Third Hidden Assumption: Darwinian Evolution Is
a Law of the Cosmos NASA
completes its definition with “capable of Darwinian evolution.” At this point
the mask fully drops. A 19th-century English naturalist is promoted to
universal legislator of existence. Darwinian
evolution is not a cosmic principle. It is a local optimization algorithm
running on specific planetary chemistry under specific atmospheric conditions. To insist
that all life must evolve by: ·
Replication ·
Variation ·
Selection is like
insisting that all intelligence must use: ·
Binary ·
Turing machines ·
Silicon This is
not science. 4. What NASA Completely Misses: Life Is Not a Chemical System
— It Is a Contingent Response Once you
strip the problem to its absolute minimum, intelligence is not metabolism.
Life is not chemistry. Existence does not require DNA. The only defensible
universal criterion is: Active
response contingent on experienced structure. That’s
it. ·
Not reproduction ·
Not molecules ·
Not evolution ·
Not cells ·
Not carbon Just: The
capacity to alter internal behavior based on what
is encountered. A single responsive
quantum configuration that modifies its future displacement based on prior
displacement already beats NASA’s entire checklist. Under
this framing, NASA could be driving past: ·
Planet-sized responsive fields ·
Time-scale intelligence stretching over eons ·
Stellar-scale adaptive systems ·
Non-chemical, non-replicating, non-Darwinian
agencies —all
while confidently announcing: “No life
detected.” 5. The Ultimate Irony: NASA Defines Life in a Universe
Where Nothing Ever Touches Under Contact
Realism: ·
No atoms touch ·
No molecules touch ·
No cells truly touch ·
No bodies touch ·
No signals touch Everything
NASA calls “interaction” is actually quantised
misregistration across vacuum gaps. And yet
life arises anyway. All from
structural error. So NASA’s definition of life
is doubly ironic: 1. It
defines life in terms of chemistry, which itself only exists as a stabilized
hallucination of contact. 2. It
demands Darwinian evolution, which is just one optimized misread among many
possible misreads in a universe built on non-touching. 6. The Final Trapdoor NASA Refuses to Fall Through If life
is a chemical system, And if
meaning, morality, and purpose are optimized misreads, A
taxpayer-funded ritual designed to reassure one primate species that it is
not alone—while quietly assuming that anything truly
different does not count. NASA
cannot adopt this view because it detonates its foundational premise: That life
is something you can define before you encounter it. But under
the final trapdoor of Contact Realism: ·
You cannot define life in advance. ·
You can only provoke response. ·
And you cannot demand that the response resemble
you. 7. Cynic’s Closing Diagnostic NASA’s
definition of life is not wrong because it is inaccurate. It is
wrong because it is: ·
Ontologically arrogant ·
Evolutionarily parochial ·
Metaphysically unexamined ·
Structurally terrified of non-human forms of
agency It does
not ask: “What is the
minimum required for existence to recognize itself?” It asks
instead: “Where
else might we find a slightly damp version of ourselves?” Final Verdict NASA’s
definition of life is what happens when: ·
A necessary survival fiction ·
Mistakes itself for a cosmic law Life is
not a self-sustaining chemical system capable of Darwinian evolution. Life is
what happens when: Quantised non-contact
misregisters as presence and begins to respond to itself. Everything
else is local decoration. The Optimal Language reconsidered |