some of the copies are imperfect copies, most of which simply will not work, but one of which by accident might work better than the original. It attaches better or survives better in the air, or something. so as the copies copy copies of copies, one variant comes to dominate, and as vaccines or immune systems make progress in suppressing the original, variants that accidentally resist the body's defences spread more. This is more like water flowing downhill than any kind of fight, but from a human pov, the human can fight the current of water even though the water is not fighting at all. — unenlightened
And I can argue all day against comparison to the evolution of virus DNA, or any other competence without comprehension.Well no it is not will. But still I could never accept these comparisons with computers. — dimosthenis9
So are you saying that a virus genetically designed in a lab has no will but an identical virus naturally evolved does?Computers are children of the human mind. An alive creature and its mind manufactured them. — dimosthenis9
I also don't accept that computers have a will: I introduced them as an example of something with no will that can optimise. Saying "but they're designed" or "they're not alive" isn't a response. No one is willing the particular transmission of a particular message at a particular time. The underlying mechanics are opaque to most. No will involved, and yet it optimises.But computers aren't alive.
I got what you mean and the analogy you use here. But though there are many similarities sometimes I can't accept them working exactly the same. — dimosthenis9
So are you saying that a virus genetically designed in a lab has no will but an identical virus naturally evolved does? — Kenosha Kid
Saying "but they're designed" or "they're not alive" isn't a response. — Kenosha Kid
Our own multi-faceted will to live could be, at least in part, a product of the same thing. — frank
But for example with vaccinations when you "fight" the virus. It responds right? Some variations have much more resistance to vaccines. Trying to "fight back" and keep existing. Doesn't it change as to keep existing?
If it did nothing at all why not just fall apart from the first place? Doesn't that response indicates something? Maybe it doesn't but I don't know I find it weird. — dimosthenis9
Viruses designed naturally or in a lab are both something alive (well it's an open issue if they are but let's assume yes). — dimosthenis9
Computers are children of the human mind. — dimosthenis9
They do are designed by humans and they aren't alive indeed. So this can never be a convincing argument for me. — dimosthenis9
So earlier we established that it isn't the living (or life-modifying) individual that demonstrates will, but the RNA over many generations — Kenosha Kid
Is RNA more alive than a computer? — Kenosha Kid
In the case of a man-made virus which you want to argue has a will, you held the fact that it's man-made irrelevant to the question of it having a will, only that it's alive (even though it isn't). Yet in the case of a computer which you wish to argue has no will, the fact that it's man-made is relevant. — Kenosha Kid
So apparently you didn't buy my explanation of evolution by natural selection. If you want to buy into some sort of story about the struggling virus fighting against our attempts to kill it, there's not much more I can say. — T Clark
Well yeah it is. — dimosthenis9
Even if the virus is man made it is a living thing. — dimosthenis9
Computers are children of the human mind. — dimosthenis9
is somehow relevant. This is incoherent thinking. — Kenosha Kid
Is it your belief that all organic molecules are themselves alive? — Kenosha Kid
No it isn't. Not everything man made is the same. Again, a clone is the same with computers? I can't understand why you find that so weird. — dimosthenis9
Not all. But RNA is. — dimosthenis9
. If being man-made precludes will, it should do so whether alive or not. I — Kenosha Kid
Changing one's values to fit different desired conclusions is just weak argumentation. — Kenosha Kid
RNA is alive. Yeah okay. :yikes: We're a long way from science, Toto. — Kenosha Kid
No it doesn't precludes will. Where did I mention that? — dimosthenis9
You find that it isn't alive? — dimosthenis9
No will involved, just evolution by natural selection. — T Clark
Viruses are subject to natural selection. Our own multi-faceted will to live could be, at least in part, a product of the same thing. — frank
Natural selection is like a filter, but is a filter responsible for generating what goes through it? Why should there be anything for natural selection to select? — Wayfarer
You certainly stated its artificiality as a counterargument. If you're backtracking on that, good. — Kenosha Kid
In fact you're the only person I've ever met who thinks viruses are alive. — Kenosha Kid
Evolution 101 - but it doesn't address the question. — Wayfarer
Natural selection is like a filter, but is a filter responsible for generating what goes through it? Why should there be anything for natural selection to select? — Wayfarer
Every living creature despite how simple or complex is (from bacteria to humans) does exactly the same thing. Wants to keep existing. Survive. Evolution is absolutely connected to survival also. The main purpose of evolution is survival. — dimosthenis9
I’ll add to the mix of ideas as regards possible answers: my own presumption is that evolution in some way works with the will to “be/become conformant to objective reality - both metaphysical and physical”. Those changes (mutations, etc.) or properties that deviate the being/entity (e.g., species) from objective reality to a sufficient extent tend to cause the being/entity to cease to be. Those changes or properties that conform the being/entity to objective reality to a sufficient extent tend to cause the being/entity to continue remaining - albeit, often in changed form. Mere poetics as is, but I like it: shares certain attributes with "truth being a conformity with that which is real". Again, I acknowledge the mystical-ish poeticism to much of this. But in the absence of something more logically cogent given what I previously mentioned about evolution, I’m biased toward maintaining this point of view. This for whatever it might be worth. — javra
The issue is, the natural sciences assume that nature already exists. — Wayfarer
Teilhard made sense of the universe by assuming it had a vitalist evolutionary process.[19][20] He interprets complexity as the axis of evolution of matter into a geosphere, a biosphere, into consciousness (in man), and then to supreme consciousness (the Omega Point). — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Teilhard_de_Chardin#Teachings
What he called Agapism or Evolutionary Love he saw as the nature of reality. This love is the fundamental energy that drives all of creation and it has two seemingly opposing aspects that work together. One aspect of this impulse projects new creations into independent existence and the other draws these creations into harmonious union. — https://philosophyisnotaluxury.com/2011/12/evolutionary-love/
Lots of questions to be addressed in such perspectives (with or without my interpretations of them), and clearly they will fall under the category of mysticism for most. But if you are interested in further exploring such notions regarding evolution’s purpose, these two thinkers’ perspectives might be of help. (Sorry, didn't have the time to find better references for them.) — javra
In fact from the search that I did seems that the majority of scientists believe that. — dimosthenis9
The question of whether viruses can be considered to be alive, of course, hinges on one’s definition of life. Where we draw the line between chemistry and life can seem a philosophical, or even theological argument.
I stated that computers are human made no living things and can't be compared to living organizations. — dimosthenis9
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