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Assembly Theory: What It Does and What It Does Not Do

Johannes Jaeger

2024Journal of Molecular Evolution21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A recent publication in Nature has generated much heated discussion about evolution, its tendency towards increasing diversity and complexity, and its potential status above and beyond the known laws of fundamental physics. The argument at the heart of this controversy concerns assembly theory, a method to detect and quantify the influence of higher-level emergent causal constraints in computational worlds made of basic objects and their combinations. In this short essay, I briefly review the theory, its basic principles and potential applications. I then go on to critically examine its authors' assertions, concluding that assembly theory has merit but is not nearly as novel or revolutionary as claimed. It certainly does not provide any new explanation of biological evolution or natural selection, or a new grounding of biology in physics. In this regard, the presentation of the paper is starkly distorted by hype, which may explain some of the outrage it created.

Topics & Concepts

EpistemologyNatural selectionArgument (complex analysis)Presentation (obstetrics)Diversity (politics)BiologyOutrageEvolutionary theoryNatural (archaeology)Selection (genetic algorithm)SociologyComputer scienceLawPhilosophyArtificial intelligenceAnthropologyBiochemistryMedicinePoliticsPaleontologyPolitical scienceRadiologyOrigins and Evolution of LifePhilosophy and History of ScienceEvolution and Genetic Dynamics