World's Most Asked Questions: What is the Meaning of Life?
World's Most Asked Questions: What is the Meaning of Life?
Hello and welcome to Sciencefacthow. Our goal here is to excitedly and enthusiastically share the marvelous peculiarity of the world and give people the opportunity to know more about themselves and their universe. Recently, we were talking to some people at Google about this goal and they were like, “What if, like, we gave you the most asked questions in the world?”
That
seemed like a really good idea to us ,so they did that.
This
is the World's Most Asked Questions. Answering questions is what science is all
about, and we love it.
So let’s start out with the fourth one: What
is the meaning of life?
Yeah, it doesn’t necessarily sound like a
question for Sciencefacthow, but it kind a depends on your definition of
“meaning” and your definition of “life.” The person asking is probably
wondering what the purpose of THEIR life is...which I’m not going to weigh in
on. And probably, Google isn't the place to look for that answer.
But
the purpose of life itself? That's actually a question that science has come a
good long way to understanding. The biggest idea in understanding the history of
life on earth, and probably everywhere, if there is life elsewhere, is
evolution.
Once
upon a time, one thing made a copy of itself...creating a kind of immortality
for that thing. Though, of course, not
really, because the thing died. But the instructions for making it were passed
on. Because the second thing had the instructions, It was able to make more of
the things in the image of the first thing. The things themselves kept dying,
but the instructions lived on...and there we have the bizarre and occasionally upsetting
meaning of life, biologically...to pass on the instructions for creating more life.
Those instructions, these days, are DNA, or, for some simple organisms, RNA --
molecules that contain segments that code for different proteins, and those
proteins do the majority of the constructing of the actual organism.
In
a weird way, the life of an individual organism is just a system for keeping
the genes go in'.
Genes that don’t contribute to that task, or
especially if they interfere with it, won’t get passed because the organism
will die before it has a chance to do any breeding. And there we have the
primary mechanism of evolution. So, yeah, in a somewhat gritty sense, the biological
meaning of life is to live long enough to pass your genes on to the next
generation .
So,
basically...don’t die...and have sex. But simultaneously, there is a much more
pleasant way of saying that. The meaning of life is to create life. To
perpetuate life. To sustain and grow this marvelous and astounding complexity
that is unique in the known universe. As for the meaning of your own
life...that’s up to you to figure out.
Leading
up to this project, we did a little Sciencefacthow viewer survey where we asked
you, our viewers, a bunch of questions, including whether you felt like you
knew roughly what you were doing here on earth. In other words ,whether you had
some idea of the meaning of your life. And the results of our very unscientific
analysis of this survey were fascinating.
A full two thirds of you feel like you know roughly
what you’re doing here on earth, but those who didn’t were were substantially more
likely to suffer from chronic hiccups...so either knowing your place in the
world decreases your likelihood of getting hiccups...or getting hiccups
increases the chance that you will feel aimless. Or possibly there’s some
completely different effect going on, or our completely non-scientific survey
is not actually very good at predicting things. People who had some idea of
their purpose were also more likely to have beards, be religious, and have
fallen in love. And people who didn’t feel like they knew what their purpose
was were 26% more likely to hold violet as their favorite color of the rainbow.
So
that’s just WEIRD! Of all the fascinating questions in the world ,what question
do you most want answered? Let us know on Facebook in the comments down below,
and we will answer the best questions in a new post.
SO thank you very much to read this post and stay tuned for more questions answered here on Sciencefacthow.
ALSO READ MY OTHER POST ON WORLD'S MOST ASKED QUESTIONS...
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