Exploring the Definition of Life: DNA, RNA, and the Concept of Programming

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In summary, there is no one perfect definition of life, but some things are more indicative of life than others. Life uses energy to store energy, reproduce, and maintain a map of itself and its environment. Some life is responsive, but not all.
  • #36
Phred101.2 said:
I think awareness is the ability to measure, or to observe, or to 'receive' messages (information), and to 'send' information too (to other observers).
All living things do this...
Yes, this is embodied by the words stimulation/irritation, which is one of the criteria I listed. Living things in some way get information from the world around them (be it as simple as: it's very hot over here) and react to it (move away from the hot place). So we agree on this criteria.



Phred101.2 said:
But teleology is an ergodic function, ergodics is certainly a scientific subject.
You claim that 'worms eat and excrete', presumably their use of energy, and the 'purpose' they exhibit doing this (as every living thing that exhibits trophism does), is irrelevant, or meaningless? Or just not very useful as a way to define or describe life?
I don't follow your words but I do think we may be crossing wires here. I am taking your words of 'purpose' and 'meaning' at face value. I do not believe that life has purpose or meaning except that assigned to it arbitrarily by thinking creatures with philosophy or religion.
 
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  • #37
DaveC426913 said:
Living things in some way get information from the world around them
I would say that the "some way" involves energy, its "storage and usage" specifically. But this is irrelevant, according to your definition.
DaveC426913 said:
I do not believe that life has purpose or meaning except that assigned to it arbitrarily by thinking creatures
How do thinking creatures manage this? If the use of the energy store they all carry around, or the apparent purpose that thinking creatures 'observe' in other lifeforms (and other members of their own lifeform), is of no help, or is actually irrelevant?

I believe that both energy 'storage' and the teleology, are necessary features that 'thinking creatures' project onto them, to distinguish between living things, and non-living things. The projection doesn't create these things, they are intrinsic to all life, not created by an observer.

You can select things off the tray that are 'dead' because they do not exhibit either of these features (behaviours). A rock does not move around under its own power, or consume other things and then grow, or exhibit any sort of purposeful behaviour. We can distinguish between a rock and a bunch of insects, because of these behaviour distinctions. This is how you, me, and all living things see the world (to whatever extent they 'see', or measure it), surely?

BTW 'ergodics' is the study of evolving systems: complexity theory and emergent behaviour are included in this.
 
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  • #38
Phred101.2 said:
You can select things off the tray that are 'dead' because they do not exhibit either of these features (behaviours). A rock does not move around under its own power, or consume other things and then grow, or exhibit any sort of purposeful behaviour. We can distinguish between a rock and a bunch of insects, because of these behaviour distinctions. This is how you, me, and all living things see the world (to whatever extent they 'see', or measure it), surely?
How does one determine 'purposeful'? Does lichen exhibit more definably purposeful behaviour than a rock?
 
  • #39
How does one determine 'purposeful'?
Are you saying that we, or you, are unable to make a distinction between "purposefulness" and "non-perposefulness", or that the distinction (if we make it), is irrelevant, or of no use to us?
Does lichen exhibit more definably purposeful behaviour than a rock?
Yes it does, if you observe it carefully or closely enough. A drop of pond water is teeming with lifeforms that we need a microscope to see; is something like that (or the bacteria living all over most organisms) not life, or not 'exhibiting' behaviour because we can't see it without some instrument?
 
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  • #40
Phred101.2 said:
Are you saying that we, or you, are unable to make a distinction between "purposefulness" and "non-perposefulness", or that the distinction (if we make it), is irrelevant, or of no use to us?

Yes it does, if you observe it carefully or closely enough. A drop of pond water is teeming with lifeforms that we need a microscope to see; is something like that (or the bacteria living all over most organisms) not life, or not 'exhibiting' behaviour because we can't see it without some instrument?

But it seems that the definition is circular.
Life exhibits purposeful behaviour.
How do you define purposeful behaviour?
Well, it's behaviour that life exhibits and non-life does not.

Purposeful is a judgement call.
 
  • #41
Purposeful is a judgement call
What's a "judgement call", though? Is it the capacity of an observer to judge something (like whether there is enough light to make sugars, or enough heat, or too much)?
What else can observers do except observe --process the 'information' that is projected at them?
 
  • #42
Phred101.2 said:
What's a "judgement call", though? Is it the capacity of an observer to judge something (like whether there is enough light to make sugars, or enough heat, or too much)?
No, a judgement call means there's no objective, independent criteria for true or false, i.e. it's subject to the observer. You might decide something on my tray is exhibiting purposeful movement and who am I to say it's not purposeful? The first question I'm going to ask is 'what - in your judgement - makes it purposeful'?

Which means we're back to not having a definition.
 
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  • #43
In which case, how do we, or any group of observers, end up making decisions (like whether something that's wriggling around might be good to eat for instance, or worth chasing, or as in our case, here on this forum)?
 
  • #44
Phred101.2 said:
In which case, how do we, or any group of observers, end up making decisions (like whether something that's wriggling around might be good to eat for instance, or worth chasing, or as in our case, here on this forum)?
?
What does this subjective, goal-driven action have to do with the task of creating a definition of life? We're talking pure academics here, not survival techniques.
 
  • #45
DaveC426913 said:
?
What does this subjective, goal-driven action have to do with the task of creating a definition of life? We're talking pure academics here, not survival techniques.
What does this discussion (which I claim is also a "subjective, goal driven action" -and you appear to be claiming also that there is a "purpose" to all this activity, or maybe you are also claiming that there isn't any such thing as "purpose" at the same time, I can't quite figure this out) have to do with goals or purpose? We aren't able to make decisions based on this 'activity' according to you...
What's your definition of 'pure' academics btw?

Your definition does not seem to allow for the (observed) behaviour of life to 'preserve' itself. Without purpose, no organism would bother to expend energy looking for food, or move away from danger. We would simply stay inside a burning building, or remain 'unmoved' by an oncoming flood, or violent storm, or an attacking wild animal (a lion say); since we can't make a 'judgement', there is no point in having or even defining purposeful behaviour, because its an illusion; no lifeforms have this property, they simply sit around waiting for whatever might come along, but can't decide what to do if something does...
 
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  • #46
I think we've gotten mired in a meta-discussion; we're now talking about how our own discussion is an example of the topic we're arguing.

Hmm.

I'm going to go back to this point:

In which case, how do we, or any group of observers, end up making decisions (like whether something that's wriggling around might be good to eat for instance, or worth chasing, or as in our case, here on this forum)?

I don't see how the answer to this is directly relevant. It seems to be more about the application of our definition of life. We should first try to define life.
 
  • #47
On another thread I defined life this way, I think it works for all known examples of it that exist on earth:

life = entities with self generated action mediated by nucleic acid (either DNA or RNA)

see here:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=114399

There are many other threads on this forum about this important question. If we do not know what life is, the word Biology has no meaning. So, if you study Biology, then I say you study entities with self generated action mediated by nucleic acid (either DNA or RNA). Of course how you can study such entities comes in many forms, which is what makes Biology such a great field of study, and so much more complex than any other natural science.
 
  • #48
Rade said:
On another thread I defined life this way, I think it works for all known examples of it that exist on earth:

life = entities with self generated action mediated by nucleic acid (either DNA or RNA)
That would be the definition of life-as-we-know-it.

But it still seems self-referential to me.
 
  • #49
We should first try to define life.
I agree. This is supposedly the point of this thread, and I'm keen to see how well we do or how far we can all (as a group, say) agree on what each has to offer to the discussion.

First, I think it's probably important to define the question: what is it asking?
"How do we define" life, or how do we notice what it is, or what we are? How much of a problem is there with life trying to define itself (us, or any other organism)?
What about the possibility of being 'observed' --by something that isn't alive, as far as we can define, or 'notice'? How does the world 'see' life, in other words (or maybe that's a bit too obtuse or obscure for some).

Anyways, if you start with the assumption that you already know the answer --it's something you were born with, or some kind of innate knowledge (like knowing how to move around, or see or hear things)-- then it shifts to: What is this innate knowledge? Selecting live and dead things and sorting them (as on a tray), must involve some decision-making; what decisions get made, and why or how?

I don't personally think it's helpful to try to exclude things that are obvious characteristics; what's the point of doing that?
e.g. "moves around" (except for the life that doesn't, but this kind of 'non-motile' life isn't static, it is an active thing), or "has purpose", or "uses energy", etc.. Life does all this, so why is it 'important' to classify it as "irrelevant" --which I don't think is the case either? I don't see how something can be defined by describing what it doesn't do, except in a limited way; or that defining its characteristics away (as not meaningful) --so excluding them-- is going to get to any sort of useful goal here.
 
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  • #50
We strive for the most concise definition. If something can be expressed with one rule as easily as several rules, we go with the one rule.
 
  • #51
I recall reading recently that "reality" can be described in 40-something equations, and these are the most accurate description to date, of all the interactions, described mathematically. Or maybe it was 400-something, but there's an idea that we can describe, or abstract everything eventually.
 
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