In an
op-ed piece in The New York Times,
Ferris Jabr of Scientific American kindly
informs us that nothing is really alive, not even Jabr himself or his
readers. Fairly verbose for a dead guy, he
develops the theme at length -- not by way of giving an explicit argument for his claim, so much as by
putting forward considerations intended to make it appear something other than
the killer joke it
seems on its face to be.
The routine
is familiar, even if Jabr’s thesis is a bit more extreme than that of other
biological reductionists. There’s no generally agreed upon definition
of life; there are borderline cases such as viruses; living and non-living
things are all made up of the same kinds of particles; so…



























