Because extra-biological factors are as just as important as biological factors in the process of gene expression, it becomes very hard to draw any kind of hard diving line between the two. — StreetlightX
Now, what's philosophically interesting to me about all this is that, if I understand the implications correctly, it throws into question the specificity of life itself, or rather what does and does not count as 'alive'. That is, if we think in terms of networks, how is it possible to think the specificity of life itself, insofar as the dynamics of genome networks are defined as much by extra-biological factors as they are biological ones? Because extra-biological factors are as just as important as biological factors in the process of gene expression, it becomes very hard to draw any kind of hard diving line between the two. This also follows, as a matter of principle, from the fact that networks are simply indifferent to the 'content' of the nodes which constitute them: it's all just a matter of the organization and threshold levels.
There's alot more to say, but as usual, I'm going to stop before I go on too long. — StreetlightX
Really interesting. You, Apokrisis, fdrake, and a few others are often discourteous enough to try to tie the simplifications we play with in philosophy to the irreducibly complex real world. — T Clark
He wrote that the most important genes in terms of impact on the organism are often those that control the rate or sequence of expression of other genes. — T Clark
Yeah, Gould was among the greatest champions of those who were dissatisfied with the 'gene-centrism' of biology, but even then, he hewed closely to the idea that genes were nonetheless the only units of heredity relevant to organisms, when this is more and more no longer thought to be the case. — StreetlightX
In terms of evolution, this matters because understood as such, the 'unit' of evolutionary variation can no longer be thought to be single genes, but rather, the an entire genomic network — StreetlightX
Yeah, biosemiosis fits into this insofar as signs serve to regulate the dynamics of both development and evolution and helps us to speak of 'directedness' in both, but I'm unsure how to triangulate that with the question of life posed in the OP. — StreetlightX
That is, if we think in terms of networks, how is it possible to think the specificity of life itself — StreetlightX
Where do ‘species’ fit in? Surely they rate a mention at least as ‘nodes’ in the network? — Wayfarer
Doesn't it have to do with something like negentropy? Life appears to go against the Second Law of Thermodynamics, but it really isn't because its an open system that takes in free energy from its surroundings and produces heat and entropy back. Life is what is a negentropic open system. — schopenhauer1
I guess that may be more at the biophysics level of definition. But, are you asking whether life needs to have some sort of material substance like genetic material, to be considered life or is it more about the arrangement of the material? And if it is the arrangement of the material, what makes it different from any other arrangement of material? I'm just wondering if you can break down your post into a succinct question as far as the question of life you are proposing. — schopenhauer1
Perhaps I can put it this way: if one can't identify the biological alone with life (insofar as there can be no such thing, strictly speaking, as 'biology alone'), then how exactly are we to situate 'life?'. I don't think, by the way, that this question can be answered categorically. I ultimately think that this is a political and even ethical question, rather than a strictly empirical one, but I want to specify, on the side of the empirical, as it were, why this would be the case. — StreetlightX
In terms of evolution, this matters because understood as such, the 'unit' of evolutionary variation can no longer be thought to be single genes, but rather, the an entire genomic network (one consequence of this is that one can no longer talk about DNA as a simple 'blueprint' for life. — StreetlightX
If you cut one, or rearrange the organization of a set, and it doesn't affect the outcome (the expression of that trait), then it would be safe to say that that particular gene that was removed, or that particular arrangement of sets of genes that was rearranged, doesn't affect the expression of that trait. That is to say that there isn't a causal connection between that gene or arrangement of genes and that particular trait.The idea is that there are multiple 'ropes' which underlie the expression of any one trait, and cutting one, or even rearranging the organization of the ropes, may or may not affect the final outcome. Only by understanding the network and the interactions among it, may we understand how gene expression takes place — StreetlightX
Biology is beholden to the laws of physics. You can't have the findings of two different fields contradict each other. Biology is just a sub-discipline of physics. Humans tend to put things into little boxes, including fields of science, which is ultimately an explanation of the world as a whole. — Harry Hindu
I don't understand the distinction. It is all interesting to me, or at least the part I want to know about at any given moment. I could get all the biological explanations I wanted to, but it would all be without any foundation without physics. Even after answering every "biological" question, you'd still be left with asking, "What governs biology?"That a biological system does not contradict any physical laws is one of the least interesting features of a biological system: the interesting ones concern its biology. — fdrake
Again, I don't see the distinction you are making. If a reduction of biology to physics is pointless, then so to is reducing the living to the non-living. Our bodies and natural selection must obey the laws of physics. If it didn't then we could all fly without the proper anatomy.A reduction of biology to physics methodologically is pointless, philosophically a reduction of the living to the non-living is interesting though. Perhaps it's useful to say that the living is composed by the non-living in some manner, however. — fdrake
Which is to say that the particle has a particular feature or property (it's negativity) that makes it do what it does. You seem to be implying that negativity could exist independent of particles. If it could, then why did you use the term, "particle" at all?'it's all made of particles!'
'is the tendency of negatively charged particles to repulse negatively charged particles made of particles?'
'no, it's something the particles do' — fdrake
The problem I have is with the idea of "biology alone". Biology is not a self-contained set of substrates, but a fluid dynamic between certain macromolecules and the environment in a series of physical processes- some described probabilistically, some perhaps more straightforward (and all of it it perhaps biosemiotically). Thus it isn't just DNA, but the networks that they produce to create more complex processes. The networks that you describe may be analogous, if we were to isolate it in a network mapping way, but it is its situatedness, along with other biological substrates like DNA, cells, proteins and generally all the macromolecules that are found in lifeforms, that make it biological. The evolutionary history of how these networks came about and its unique way of solving problems using its structural constituents to influence its growth and development is what matters here. — schopenhauer1
If you cut one, or rearrange the organization of a set, and it doesn't affect the outcome (the expression of that trait), then it would be safe to say that that particular gene that was removed, or that particular arrangement of sets of genes that was rearranged, don't affect the expression of that trait. — Harry Hindu
That a biological system does not contradict any physical laws is one of the least interesting features of a biological system: the interesting ones concern its biology. — fdrake
One super interesting thing to bring up in relation to this - I might start another thread on this down the line - is in following Robert Rosen's contention that biology is, contrary to what is commonly thought, a more general science than physics, insofar as biological systems have a richer repertoire of causal entailments than do physical ones. Physical systems thus being a more limited field of study, even if they qualitatively make up more of the universe. This is one of those lovely thoughts, I think, that spurred me to study biology in some depth - what to know physics? Study biology! :D
I don't see incentive as part of the equation. Things behave in certain ways as a result of how they were designed. There was no incentive prior to, or the cause of, flight. Flight occurred as a result of natural selection acting on genetic mutations over eons. By saying there is an incentive is projecting your own purposes onto reality, as if reality has reasons, or incentives, to design things. It doesn't. "Design" isn't even an appropriate term to use to describe what natural selection does, as there is no incentive, purpose, reason, or goal that natural selection has prior to the process itself taking place.As you pointed out, stuff like air-resistance and aerodynamics enables things to fly; but doesn't make an incentive for things to fly. — fdrake
Then if it wasnt implied that negativity was a separate feature of a particle, then it must be that it is an integral feature of that particle. Repelling other particles is what that particle does as a result of its negativity. If it didn't repel other particles then we couldn't say that possessed negativity.I didn't intend to imply that the interaction of charges could exist independent of particles (requires charged particles and carrier particles). Just that it's something particles do, not something that they are. This was meant to highlight that the ontological reduction of stuff to particles doesn't even help much in describing what particles do (other than as an enabling condition for the study of particle behaviour); as an analogy to the reduction of biology as a field of study to physics as a field of study. — fdrake
I don't see incentive as part of the equation. Things behave in certain ways as a result of how they were designed. There was no incentive prior to, or the cause of, flight. Flight occurred as a result of natural selection acting on genetic mutations over eons. By saying there is an incentive is projecting your own purposes onto reality, as if reality has reasons, or incentives, to design things. It doesn't. "Design" isn't even an appropriate term to use to describe what natural selection does, as there is no incentive, purpose, reason, or goal that natural selection has prior to the process itself taking place.
. By saying there is an incentive is projecting your own purposes onto reality, as if reality has reasons, or incentives, to design things. — Harry Hindu
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