The Origin of Digital Information

Abstract

This article considers the relationship between life and digital information. First, from a thermodynamic perspective, life uses Gibbs free energy to store information. Animals obtain Gibbs free energy from food and plants from sunlight. Second, Genetic information does not deteriorate after repeated copying because natural selection irreversibly eliminates lethal mutations. Third, even the synthetic minimal cell, JCVI-syn3A, has a 543 kb genome (Pelletier, 2021). The probability of forming the same base sequence as the minimal cell by chance is about one in 3.8×10 32691 . Then, considering the estimated age of the universe and the total number of particles in the universe, the probability of this base sequence occurring by chance is almost zero (Anderson, 2011). Therefore, the death of
life is irreversible. Finally, Digital information containing DNA bases has properties close to Platonic one: indivisibility, invariability, and equality. Life uses these properties to stretch the DNA sequence with simple, repetitive operations. As a result, the amount of information in the DNA sequence exponentially increases.

Citations

Kazuhiko Kotani. 2023. "The Origin of Digital Information". London Journal of Humanities and Social Science LJRHSS Volume 23 (LJRHSS Volume 23 Issue 19): NA.

Related Research

  • Classification

    LCC Code: Q375

  • Version of record

    v1.0

  • Issue date

    NA

  • Language

    English

Iconic historic building with domed tower in London, UK.
Open Access
Research Article
CC-BY-NC 4.0
Request permissions
[show_author_issue]