 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
          T Clark
T Clark         
         Why even these tiniest living things have that Will to keep on existing? — dimosthenis9
 Hanover
Hanover         
          Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
          Raymond
Raymond         
          dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
          dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
          Kenosha Kid
Kenosha Kid         
          dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         It's as if the virus has a(n) (invisible) brain that's strategizing, thinking about what's its next best move. — Agent Smith
 Olivier5
Olivier5         
         It's as if the virus has a(n) (invisible) brain that's strategizing, thinking about what's its next best move.
— Agent Smith
That's more or less the core of my question. — dimosthenis9
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         Will is persuant to an individual: evolution is not. — Kenosha Kid
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         Just like a computer can win a chess game — Olivier5
 Kenosha Kid
Kenosha Kid         
         Like a primal mechanism of making the virus "decide" to go on existing. To include the information as "to know what to do" as to keep existing. If that makes more sense. — dimosthenis9
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
          dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         The appearance of will and purpose and design in evolution is the same. It's a foot in the door to understanding the mechanics through metaphor, especially in large state spaces and complex environments that are otherwise difficult to grasp. But at heart it's just dumb numbers doing dumb things according to statistics and feedback mechanisms — Kenosha Kid
 Kenosha Kid
Kenosha Kid         
         So in general, if I got it right, your point is that as everything, viruses variants are just an automatical mechanical procedure and includes no transmission of any kind of information as to go on existing?Right? — dimosthenis9
 Raymond
Raymond         
          T Clark
T Clark         
         So these strains were there from the very beginning? Since "virus birth"?? And just some of them die and others survive? Haven't these strains developed afterwards as an effort from the virus to survive? — dimosthenis9
 Outlander
Outlander         
         Covid variations are nothing more than a desperate effort of the virus to survive. — dimosthenis9
So let's not talk about complex creatures like humans and animals. Let's talk about the tiniest forms of life(bacteria, virus. etc) and here are the questions — dimosthenis9
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         This may very well be the best discussion ever proposed in the history of reality.
It will probably be deleted soon. — Outlander
So how can we not talk about all understandings of what life and energy is. Just because you can't detect the thoughts or understand or decode them doesn't mean they don't exist. — Outlander
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         Variations in the virus strains develop as the result of random genetic mutations which take place on a continuous basis. Some mutations have no significant effect, some have negative consequences for the organism, and some have a positive effect. — T Clark
 T Clark
T Clark         
         But if you see it in large scale and not individually, the purpose of the variations of let's say the general "population of Covid viruses" (same with humankind genes) seems to be to keep staying alive. The purpose of this evolution procedure is to keep existing. Keep living. Seems to me like a "force" pushing towards there. — dimosthenis9
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         But computers only do as we tell them, which is will!": M — Kenosha Kid
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         Evolution has no drive, direction, purpose, or force. — T Clark
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         DNA is always trying to end its miserable existence, and eventually, almost all strains and strands achieve this. — unenlightened
 T Clark
T Clark         
         That's true indeed?DNA tries to "kill itself"? — dimosthenis9
 Raymond
Raymond         
          Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
         It's as if the virus has a(n) (invisible) brain that's strategizing, thinking about what's its next best move.
— Agent Smith
That's more or less the core of my question. Seems really weird to me indeed. Though it might be a biological scientific issue that I m not aware of — dimosthenis9
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         That's true indeed? — dimosthenis9
 dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         it does exactly nothing. It just sits there until it falls apart — unenlightened
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