What if life isn't rare at all, but the signature of a living universe?
In Seeds of the Living Cosmos, explore the idea that life is not a cosmic accident, but a natural consequence of physics, chemistry, and time. Drawing on astrobiology, cosmology, and evolutionary science, this book challenges Earth-centric assumptions and reimagines how life emerges, spreads, and shapes planetary systems.
From extremophiles that survive in space to supernovae that may scatter organic molecules across galaxies, each chapter reveals new ways of understanding life as a repeating pattern not a one-off miracle. Discover how water, stars, and entropy align to favour complexity; how biospheres might arise on distant exoplanets; and why evolution itself may be a universal process.
What if the universe isn't just capable of life, what if it's alive?
With thought-provoking insight and interdisciplinary clarity, Seeds of the Living Cosmos repositions humanity within a vast biological web stretching across space and time. This is a book not just about finding life, but realising we are part of it.