Re: [Fis] ON MOLECULAR BIONETWORKS (IV) On NumberRe: [Fis] ON MOLECULAR BIONETWORKS (IV) On Number
From: Igor Rojdestvenski <igor.rojdestvenski@plantphys.umu.se>
Date: Mon 23 Jan 2006 - 10:24:56 CET
Dear Jerry:
I am not sure I understand you correctly. I used mathematical concepts only
as a convenient language. There is no mathematics in Nature at large. If we remember Robert Rosen's
modeling paradigm (natural phenomenon ->encoding -> model -> mathematical evolution of the
model ->decoding -> natural phenomenon evolution), the primary role of mathematics is
encoding-decoding. As such, it is a very good tool for creative "co-mingling", because
very different phenomena may be encoded into very similar mathematical models. Such similarities
enhance our understanding of the models and, through them, of the underlying natural phenomena. Also
mathematical language is quite well defined, so when it is used there is less space for ambiguity in
understanding.
Igor
----- Original Message -----
Dear Igor:
Your reponse includes many threads of science and philosophy that are co-mingled with
mathematical concepts.
A few comments which may provide you some concrete examples that separate our world
views, particularly about mathematics. Your philosophy of mathematics is a rather traditional one in
the physical world. I have sought to explain why this view of continuous mathematics is not adequate
for discrete relations among electro-chemical particles, electrochemical individuals we call the
chemical elements.
If you are serious about understanding the mathematical distinction, I suggest you
attempt to use the atomic number in basic arithmetic, such as the distributive law and the
commutative law.
I suggest you demonstrate how your view of mathematics applies to these numbers and
report back to the list your conclusions.
On Dec 25, 2005, at 11:32 AM, Igor Rojdestvenski wrote:
Dear Jerry,
I will answer "my part" in green:
Igor writes (vol. 488, 6)
A cell mechanism A adapts (measures) to the cell environment,
which it is part of. During this adaptation it increases its complexity and changes (by its very
presence) the cell environment, which thus also increases its complexity. Given that there are many
such mechanisms (enzyme catalyzed chemical reactions, organelles, membranes, etc), each mechanism
increases its complexity by reflecting on the presence of the totality of the other mechanisms.
JLRC:
I would prefer to express the concepts in terms of the flow of
electrical particles...
It may be flow of electric particles,
e.g. "measurement" as exchange of electrons or radicals in chemical reactions, which leads
to saturations of concentrations of products and thus changes the environment;
It may be flow of photons, e.g.
photosyntetic apparatus of green plants "measures" the incident light by producing flow of
protons further used in ATP production and flow of electrons for NADPH production. These flows
change, for example, the pH in certain parts of chloroplast, which, in turn, changes the flows
themselves, including the available photon flow by, for example, epoxydation/deepoxydation of
xantofills, "screening" photosystems from light;
Many more examples possible...
In all these cases change, occuring as a reaction to a certain
flow, is a measurement of this flow, and it, in turn, forces the changes to this flow.
Yes, one may say that most of these phenomena deal with either
flows of charged particles or photons. This is, however, trivial.
Trivial? If these electrical flows are trivial, perhaps you may wish to write the
equations for reproduction of a cell in terms of these flows.
Indeed, there exist only 4 force fields -- electromagnetic,
gravity, strong and weak. In case of living matter, at the level of description of biomolecular
networks, we deal only with the first one, with electromagnetic field.
As far as I am aware, no conclusive evidence can be provided that ONLY four force fields
exist. Perhaps you mean to say that thus far, physicists have not found a way to view the term
"force field" in a unified way and thus create a narrative that justifies a statement that
at least four distinctions are necessary.
I have no idea why you reject a gravitational field in bio networks. For example, our
blood pressure adapt when we move from a reclining to an upright position.
Hence, the only material objects that really matter are those
which interact with the electromagnetic field or are produced by it, i.e. photons and charges (ions
and electrons)
The term "mechanism" can be used in either a
mathematical sense, a chemical sense, or a general sense. In what sense is it being used in this
paragraph?
When I say "mechanism" I mean:
a mathematical abstraction in the
form of system of equations for the biochemical networks, that represents our understanding of the
above.
Nature as such does not know equations and networks,
Are you placing man outside of nature? Man (scientists) are emergent from chemical
systems and as part of nature we know how simple equations and simple networks work.
these are means of our interpretation of what happens out there.
I think that this is more or less in line with Robert Rosen's views.
My reading of Robert Rosens texts is radically different than yours. I am referring to
two texts, "Life Itself" and "Anticipatory Systems". Which texts are you
referring to?
More specifically, in the narrative you provide, how does one
create relations between electrical particles and the dynamics of bionetworks? Although only a small
number of different electrical particles exist, how does one create the range of organisms in an
ecosystem?
Another argument: One needs only 0 and 1 values for the bit to
convey in a string of bits as much information as one needs to.
If this were true, how much information is in an NAD molecule? Please show how you would
start with Shannon information and calculate a value.
How can we make such concepts EXACT such that they become a
meaningful method of scientific prediction? This is the challenge for bionetworks at all levels of
perplexity. How does individuality arise from such a narrative?
The problem is that we are oftentimes dealing here with the
unstable non-equilibrium systems which are deterministic but unpredictable.
Are you aware that chemical structures can not be entered into Thermodynamics? Only the
ratio of concentrations of a specified reaction can be transferred from chemical theory into
continuous mathematical equations. .
This means that we cannot predict their behavior but can explain
it afterwards.
A very interesting remark. The remark reminds me of my children when they were teenagers.
A good example is the game of pool. It is absolutely impossible
to predict (before the stroke is made) exactly where each ball lands after the first stroke made
into the "triangle" of balls. However, all the interactions, of course, obey Newtonian
laws, and backward reconstruction of the process is possible.
I fail to see any meaningful comparison between a game of pool and emergence of life and
biological reproduction. For example, what is the correspondence between a genetic system and the
forces of a fixed set of inelastic collisions? No generative operations are needed to describe a
pool game.
Only general features of it may be probabilistically predicted.
And this is exactly how the individuality comes into picture. Had it not been for these
instabilities and extreme sensitivity to small variations in initial and boundary conditions, we
would have been all alike and all the same.
Igor: Your belief in mathematical appears to me to be full, complete and totally
classical physics.
The challenge to you is to tackle some real chemical and biological problems to test your
theories, EXACTLY. Narratives are easy to generate but the real test is in calculations. If Poincare
was correct, you have some real challenges.
I would add that chemical theory provides an exact method of calculation of electrical
flows as well as the representation of electrical particles in chemical structures. The consequences
of chemical calculations is a collection of relations that become the starting point for physical
calculations attempting to describe the motion of the electrical particles in time and space. The
chemical calculations are antecedent to physical calculations.
Two other comments:
1. I use the word 'exactly' to mean EXACTLY, not approximately.
2. One of the philosophical differences between your world view and mine is that revealed
by the ancient distinction between species and genera. It appears that you view mathematical
generalities as universally applicable. I view the world as composed from species. Classical
mathematical generalities are seldom applicable exactly to chemical or biological species. (or, was
Poincare wrong?)
Of course, I could be wrong... if you can calculate the number of isomers of NAD using
classical mathematical combinatorics, I would be forced to reconsider the entire structure of my
logic. (And chemical sciences would have to reconsider the nature of valence.)
Cheers
Jerry
Igor
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