Fw: [Fis] "The fiction of function".Fw: [Fis] "The fiction of function".
From: Igor Rojdestvenski <igor.rojdestvenski@plantphys.umu.se>
Date: Sat 08 Oct 2005 - 15:17:58 CEST
----- Original Message -----
Dear Jerry,
Thanks for your post. I meant to be provocative. Once we begin to absolutise our theories or even our
systems of symbols, we drift away from natural physics, that is, become metaphysical. The question I
still strive to get an answer to is, simply put, as follows:
Is information physical or metaphysical?
This question, in principle, may be
I am merely listing the possibilities here and not advocating any of these alternatives. But we
should be aware of the playground. Otherwise we will be entangled in an endless web of oxymoronic
tautologies.
Igor
----- Original Message -----
Dear Igor:
The assertions in your post are very, very provocative.
Science and information theory have generated a number of symbol systems in order to
facilitate human communication.
At times, one symbol system expresses certain concepts more efficiently than others. No
one symbol system can be shown to be superior to all others for all circumstances. The symbol system
of chemistry expresses empirical observations.
One must be aware that the objects of biology - the cellular parts and pieces, exist.
Living systems are composed from chemical entities, not physical theories.
By exist, I mean an intimate association between the concept of existence, the concept of
properties and the concept of name. For every chemical entity, the concept of existence is necessary
in order to assign properties. The assignment of a name depends on a logic proof of the associations
as exhibited by the properties. Chemical proof theory is an exact accounting of positions of
electrical particles and a consistent grammar of composition.
From the vantage point of these philosophical generalities, I address particular points
in the post.
From: Igor Rojdestvenski
Dear Kevin and others,
Very interesting post, the more interesting to argue. The ribosome does not
have a function. We assign its behavior a certain goal which we call "function". A very
interesting treatise on this can be found at
The article is called "The fiction of function".
The existence of a network in physical sense is also highly questionable.
Chemical networks are not physical networks. This is well known. Chemical network
terminology describes reaction sequences as directed graphs, not mathematical functions.
I may seem boringly formal, but as long as we do definitions here, we should
be.
In the absence of a formal theory of chemistry, I do not know how we could hope to do
this.
There are no metabolic networks in the Nature, but pools of interacting
substances (molecules).
Metabolic networks are integrated over evolutionary time spans. The concept of a
"pool" is remote from the abstract concept of the intimacy of dependencies within a
metabolic network.
Really physical is a molecule and interactions between the molecules.
I do not know the meaning of this sentence. Physical philosophy is not a chemical object,
is it?
All the rest, like chains of reactions, metabolic networks and so on -- all
this is our "model", our "explanation" certain chains of events and concomitant
interactions.
The unity of life is not merely a local phenomenon, but comparable dynamic flows
distributed over comparable chemical structures. Chemical structures are not variables nor do they
correspond exactly with the notion of mass. Mathematically, each structure is a particular graph,
not a point - mass. Each chemical structure is a unique object.
I believe that one can accept the power of physical methods and mathematics while
preserving the empirical validity of chemistry and biology. Is this hypothesis untenable from a
physical view point?
It is like in the world of Feynman diagrammes some diagrammes are called
"watermelons" for their shape, but nobody expects them to really taste sweet and fruity.
I fail to see any similarity between the jargon of watermelons and the logic of physics.
perhaps you could explain this?
Cheers
jerry
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