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Liquid crystals in biology I. Historical, biological and medical aspects
Authors:Gordon T Stewart
Institution:  a University of Glasgow. Private address: 29/8, Inverleith Place, Edinburgh EH3 5QD, UK; e-mail: epishoe@gifford.co.uk.
Abstract:In our present state of knowledge, it is useful to assume that all matter, in the solar galaxy at least, is composed of atoms and subatomic particles which function independently or interact in accordance with the laws of physics to form molecules, coacervates or other aggregates. For practical purposes, these states of matter are recognizable in the three-dimensional terrestrial world as solids, liquids and gases. This differentiation suffices also for molecular studies but, to understand the properties of mobile organic and especially of living matter fundamentally, it is necessary to investigate and conceptualize how immaterial electromagnetic and electrostatic processes produce changes in state, phase and entropy compatible with self-replication, molecular memory and vitality This possibility exists in the properties of the liquid crystal (LC) as a mesophase in thermal and optical phase transitions, i.e. as an enantiomorphic intermediate form of matter which can form complex, self-replicating, ordered structures and macromolecules, easily recognizable in everyday TV visual displays, electronic communication devices and computers. It is suggested that, in prebiotic terrestrial situations, matter possessing these properties of the LC was a precursor in the evolution of living from inanimate matter and, in the lyotropic form, in the processes of life thereafter.
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