Some thinkers sympathetic to reductionism, e.g. E.O. Wilson in his Consilience, believe that the divisions between the natural sciences (and perhaps even between the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities) are merely artifacts of our current knowledge base, and that such divisions will eventually fall away as the putative deeper connections between these fields' respective theories become better-understood.Reductionism has been an extremely successful methodology, but even a reductionist must be puzzled that there are so many branches of science. — tom
Physics isn't reductionist. The physical world isn't "just matter in motion", or some such. Not everything is explained by the 2nd law of thermodynamics -- it's not all "just entropy increasing". — Moliere
Neither is chemistry. There are two broad pillars of chemical theory -- thermodynamics and kinetics -- and several subsets of chemistry which focus on the reactions of chemicals in many various ways. — Moliere
I'd say some phenomena can't be explained by some simpler and more general statements -- perhaps they require another simpler, more general statement, or they are an anomaly of sorts. — Moliere
Strictly speaking the the instances of replicators that occur in the Earth's biosphere are genes - portions of DNA that have specific information encoded in them. — tom
In which I did not mention the Turing Machine, which is abstract, but rather the Universal Computer, which is real — tom
Strictly speaking the the instances of replicators that occur in the Earth's biosphere are genes - portions of DNA that have specific information encoded in them. — tom
but even a reductionist must be puzzled that there are so many branches of science. — tom
Genes or DNA, would it be reductionist to say that they behave the way they do because of chemistry and physics? — Frederick KOH
Given any particular gene, it can be sequenced. The sequence can be encoded in ASCII or any other format — tom
The former is is widely known in the literature. Can you give me references for the latter? — Frederick KOH
A reductionist would have to explain that in terms of the Schrödinger equation. — tom
Genes are portions of DNA — Frederick KOH
Could you provide a synthesis for out benefit? — Frederick KOH
So what is being encoded is the sequence of molecules cytosine (C), guanine (G), adenine (A), and thymine. We are in agreement here. They are molecules. Would it be reductionist to say that why they and related molecules behave the way they do is because of chemistry and physics? — Frederick KOH
Actually it has been done.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_bond — Frederick KOH
The existence of those nuclear bonds merely are enabling conditions for those molecules being able to carry stable functional structures from one (or two) living progenitor(s) to its(their) progeny (i.e. whole living organisms). — Pierre-Normand
The existence of those nuclear bonds merely are enabling conditions for those molecules being able to carry stable functional structures from one (or two) living progenitor(s) to its(their) progeny (i.e. whole living organisms). — Pierre-Normand
Would it be reductionist to say that why they and related molecules behave the way they do is because of chemistry and physics? — Frederick KOH
Surely you know that DNA replication is something that has been explained at the level of individual molecules. What does "enable" mean in the context of molecules obeying the laws of physics? — Frederick KOH
For your benefit, I'll point out the distinction between a methodology and the misconception that higher level explanations cannot be fundamental. — tom
if protein folding via free energy minimisation counts as an NP complete problem? — apokrisis
Or is it OK to be hand-wavingly approximate about even these "simplest" computations that nature appears to carry out in holistic fashion. It doesn't harm your case to admit that the sum of the parts is not literally just "a sum" when it comes to chemical and physical systems? — apokrisis
Have I said anything to suggest otherwise? — Frederick KOH
DNA replication is one thing, genetic inheritance is another. — Pierre-Normand
Biological function only can be explained with reference to the high level functional organization typical of specific forms of life. If you abstract away from the context that gives significance to physiological processes, then you are doing physics and chemistry all right, but you have given up providing a biological explanation. You have just narrowed the focus to questions of material constitution, which are just one sort of question one can ask about a biological system. — Pierre-Normand
All you had to do was quote a comment of mine. — Frederick KOH
Surely you accept that as proof that "something" goes missing once one tries to reduce the rate-dependent dynamics of the real physical world to a rate-independent informational description? — apokrisis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.