[MD] Levels in electronic computers
Magnus Berg
McMagnus at home.se
Sun Jul 25 00:52:11 PDT 2010
Hi Krimel
> [Krimel]
> I'll stick with brittle in the sense that they break down when pressed. They
> are not discrete and attempts to make them so are strained at best.
>
> With respect to the notion that biology plays any role inside the computer;
> that just doesn't fly. Biology depends, arises from, exists as a result of
> organic (carbon) chemistry. If we ever elect to extend the definition of
> "life" to include anything outside of carbon based complexity that might be
> another thing but using life and biology in this context at this point is
> meaningless.
I agree completely with you, especially on "life" and "carbon based".
BUT! That doesn't mean it's impossible to make level definitions that
can't take much pressure.
The "life" part in the most commonly used biological level definition,
is simply DQ that confuses things. Life is what makes an organism able
to adapt to new circumstances, makes it something different than any
static definition can capture, i.e. DQ.
To make level definitions that can take pressure, we must remove DQ,
i.e. life, and make it dead. *Then* we can start looking at what the
different levels are. That's why a computer, or a robot, or a bunch of
robots, are so good examples to use when discussion this.
It can also be extended to higher levels. For example, my version of the
social level is usually smiled at, but it can take the pressure from
social structures like countries, cities, wolf packs, multicell
organisms, and even the social structure inside a single cell. Have you
any idea how intricate the inner workings of a single cell is? Have you
realized how much it resembles a city? If you haven't, you should watch
Lennart Nilsson's wonderful photographs in his (swedish only I'm afraid)
film about the cell. BBC has a little web site about it too on
http://www.open2.net/science/cellcity/ (You will also find my initial
post about Lennart Nilsson's film if you google it,
http://lists.moqtalk.org/pipermail/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org/2008-August/028235.html
)
After recognizing that a cell is a society in itself, we must of course
realize that the organic level starts earlier than that. But this
doesn't break anything, it just makes it easier to find similarities in
a cell and a computer and then define the organic level.
Magnus
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