“…No reason has been unequivocally enunciated, however, to ignore wholesale other elements and inorganic compounds that might have scaffolded life's origins terrestrially or elsewhere in the cosmos (Blokhuis, 2019). For example, complex functions, though seemingly requiring diverse and highly evolved catalytic polymers, may be partiallyalbeit imperfectlyundertaken by inorganic catalysts (e.g., metal ions) and interactions between simple autocatalytic cycles (Cornish-Bowden and Cá rdenas, 2020;Gá nti, 2003;Hunding et al, 2006;Kahana and Lancet, 2021;Muchowska et al, 2020Muchowska et al, , 2017Peng et al, 2023Peng et al, , 2022Peng et al, , 2020Plum and Baum, 2022). It is also possible that other pathways to alternative, non-Terran examples of life-like systems can arise under laboratory or exoplanetary/astrochemical conditions that largely deviate from terrestrial environments (Kawai et al, 2013;McKay, 1998;Stevenson et al, 2015).…”