“…How life can emerge from inanimate matter is one of the grand mysteries of science and has fascinated generations of scientists. − An important aspect of life is its homochirality: in extant life, sugars and amino acids exist only as one of the two possible enantiomers (right- and left-handed, respectively), with only few exceptions . Much more than a simple curiosity of nature, it is essential for the exceptional efficiency in information transfer, − catalysis, and electron transfer of today’s biomolecules and confers directionality to molecular and cellular motion. − Hence, homochirality is likely to play an important role in the emergence of function in the transition from chemistry to biology. ,, How biological homochirality arose from a (close to) racemic world is thus a question that intrigues. In the past decades, the scientific community has devoted much effort to study chiral amplification − and symmetry breaking processes. , Most of these efforts have been directed at the polymerization of peptides and oligonucleotides, − crystallization, , and asymmetric autocatalysis of small molecules, − of which the Soai reaction is a famous example. − An overview of these systems is provided in and .…”