Jump to content

How Life Works: Difference between revisions

From Slow Like Wiki
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
== Prologue ==
== Prologue ==
* Looking to the genome for an account of ho life works is rather like looking to a dictionary to understand how literature works.
* The new picture dispels the long-standing idea that living systems must be regarded as machines.
* Living entities are generators of meaning. They mine their environment (including their own bodies) for things that have meaning for them: moisture, nutrients, warmth. It is not sentimental but simply following the same logic to say that, for we human organisms, another of those meaningful things is love.
* Life is a hierarchical process, and each level has its own rules and principles: there are those that apply to genes, and to proteins, to cells and tissues and body modules such as the immune system and the nervous system. All are essential: none can claim primacy.
* Genes don't generally specify unique outcomes at the level of cells and organisms.
* Recurring themes and principles:
** Complexity and Redundancy
** Modularity
** Robustness
** Canalization
** Multilevel, Multidirectional, and Hierarchical Organization
** Combinatorial Logic
** Self-Organization in Dynamic Landscapes
** Agency and Purpose
** Causal Power
== 1. The End of the Machine: A New View of Life ==
== 1. The End of the Machine: A New View of Life ==
== 2. Genes: What DNA Really Does ==
== 2. Genes: What DNA Really Does ==

Revision as of 14:30, 17 December 2025

Prologue

  • Looking to the genome for an account of ho life works is rather like looking to a dictionary to understand how literature works.
  • The new picture dispels the long-standing idea that living systems must be regarded as machines.
  • Living entities are generators of meaning. They mine their environment (including their own bodies) for things that have meaning for them: moisture, nutrients, warmth. It is not sentimental but simply following the same logic to say that, for we human organisms, another of those meaningful things is love.
  • Life is a hierarchical process, and each level has its own rules and principles: there are those that apply to genes, and to proteins, to cells and tissues and body modules such as the immune system and the nervous system. All are essential: none can claim primacy.
  • Genes don't generally specify unique outcomes at the level of cells and organisms.
  • Recurring themes and principles:
    • Complexity and Redundancy
    • Modularity
    • Robustness
    • Canalization
    • Multilevel, Multidirectional, and Hierarchical Organization
    • Combinatorial Logic
    • Self-Organization in Dynamic Landscapes
    • Agency and Purpose
    • Causal Power

1. The End of the Machine: A New View of Life

2. Genes: What DNA Really Does

3. RNA and Transcription: Reading the Message

4. Proteins: Structure and Unstructure

5. Networks: The Webs That Make Us

6. Cells: Decisions, Decisions

7. Tissues: How to Build, When to Stop

8. Bodies: Uncovering the Pattern

9. Agency: How Life Gets Goals and Purpose

10. Troubleshooting: Rethinking Medicine

11. Making and Hacking: Redesigning Life

Epilogue