The Sensational Single Cell

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Writing: Grey Goo

Eric Drexler first used the term "grey goo" in his 1986 book Engines of Creation:

Imagine such a replicator floating in a bottle of chemicals, making copies of itself…the first replicator assembles a copy in one thousand seconds, the two replicators then build two more in the next thousand seconds, the four build another four, and the eight build another eight. At the end of ten hours, there are not thirty-six new replicators, but over 68 billion. In less than a day, they would weigh a ton; in less than two days, they would outweigh the Earth; in another four hours, they would exceed the mass of the Sun and all the planets combined — if the bottle of chemicals hadn't run dry long before.

Of course, it's unlikely anything like this will happen. Why not? Could yeast cells (or self-reproducing robots) go on reproducing themselves indefinitely? What, if anything, limits the total number of cells or robots that can be built?

 

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