Written by Michael Brooks
Dark matter ring in galaxy cluster Cl 0024+17. Some 96% of the universe is dark energy or dark matter. Photograph: Johns Hopkins University/Esa/Nasa
Even today, there are scientific phenomena that defy explanation. If history is anything to go by, resolving these anomalies could lead to a great leap forward, so what are the greatest mysteries, and what scientific revolutions might they bring?
1 The missing universe
Everything in the universe is either mass or energy, but there’s not enough of either. Scientists think 96% of the cosmos is missing. They have come up with names for the missing stuff – “dark energy” and “dark matter” – but that doesn’t really tell us anything about them. And it’s not as if they’re not important: dark energy is continually creating new swaths of space and time, while dark matter appears to be holding all the galaxies together. No wonder cosmologists are searching for clues to their whereabouts.
2 Life
I know you think you’re more than a sack of molecules, but why? Next time you see a tree, ask yourself why that is alive when your wooden dining table is not. The phenomenon we call life is something that biologists have almost given up trying to define – instead they’re investigating ways to make different combinations of molecules come alive. Bizarrely, the best hope is similar in chemical terms to laundry detergent.
3 Death
Here’s the flip side: in biology, things eventually die, but there’s no good explanation for it. There are hints that switching genes on and off controls ageing, but if our theory is right, those switches shouldn’t have survived natural selection. Then there’s the argument that an accumulation of faults does us in. However, there are plenty of whales and turtles who seem to age ridiculously slowly – if at all. Of course, if we can work out why, that could be great news for future humans (if not for the planet).
4 Sex
Charles Darwin might have fathered 10 children, but he couldn’t understand why almost everything in biology uses sexual reproduction rather than asexual cloning – sex is a highly inefficient way to reproduce. We still don’t know the answer. The suggestion that sex’s gene shuffling makes us more able to deal with changing environments seems plausible, but the evidence is scarce. At the moment, sex only seems to exist to give males some role in life.
5 Free will
If you want to keep your sanity, look away now. Neuroscientists are almost convinced that free will is an illusion. Their experiments show that our brains allow us to think we are controlling our bodies, but our movements begin before we make a conscious decision to move. Some researchers have already been approached to testify in court that the defendant is not to blame for anything they did. A scary legal future awaits.
โข Michael Brooks is a consultant for New Scientist and the author of 13 Things That Don’t Make Sense, published by Profile on Thursday
Great, I had a lot to do today, instead I’ll be wasting my time trying to resolve this issues ;), Nice one.
You forgot this one: Why would any middle-class American with at least two brain cells ever vote Republican?
im a stupid whiny republican that blames every problem on liberals and past democratic presidents. i also refuse to assign any responsibility to the incumbant if he is republican. my allegience is to my party not my country.
Sex is beneficial due to the offspring’s chance to improve their genetic makeup. If an asexual organism dies due to one thing, a sexual organism can mate and its offspring would not have the same fate if the partner was immune. I voted republican and had an explanation for #4, which was first described by darwin. Go to school and get an education then maybe you help solve problems rather than just point them out.
Wow. Except for number 1; What a load of absolute horse manure.
Hi “sex is awesome.” I’m very surprised you were able to come up with a coherent answer to #4. I thought all Republicans believed in Intelligent Design. For a minute you were about to say “because God said so…” Admit it… you were about to…
fascinating question about fre will,connected with matter-mind problem and central to all serious pholosophical questions.for sure is a neuroscientific problem discover by neuroscientists.i recommend read benjamin libet works to begin.and think…………..
What’s with all the Liberal bay killers here? Go kiss Obama’s Muslim ass and try to keep on topic!
don’t you fuckin love science…it keeps you thinking constantly WTF RIGHT?
I was just trying to help my 11 year old find info for his oral “the history of the universe”, but I am happy to have stumbled upon this happy little community of interlopers who enjoy a bit of science with their sarcasm.
its goog tancks