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» ISCID Forums   » General   » The Archive   » John R. Bracht: Investigating a General Biology: A Review of Kauffman

   
Author Topic: John R. Bracht: Investigating a General Biology: A Review of Kauffman
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Icon 1 posted 04. May 2002 15:58      Profile for Moderator   Email Moderator   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Investigating a General Biology: A Review of Kauffman

by John R. Bracht
jbracht@prodigy.net

Abstract: Investigations is Stuart Kauffman’s attempt to answer the question: what is life? Kauffman points out that life contains an essence, a quality, which is fundamentally different from anything we currently understand in science: "While we have, it seems, adequate concepts of matter, energy, entropy, and information, we lack a coherent concept of organization, its emergence, and self-constructing propagation and self-elaboration." In his quest, Kauffman hopes to arrive at a general biology which encapsulates this defining essence of life itself: consistent with the usual subjects of scientific investigation like physical laws, matter, and energy, yet somehow transcending those categories and able to act on its own behalf. The essence of life, Kauffman argues, is bound up in the idea of an autonomous agent, a conglomeration of matter that can carry out work cycles and reproduce itself. It is from this definition of life that the rest of the book flows. In his call for a general biology Kauffman points to important issues within biological science. However, I propose that he does not go far enough. Our modern conception of science does fail to account for autonomous agency as an emergent concept; however, Kauffman fails to account for the essence of autonomous agents--a form of functional information which Paul Davies terms "tightly specified complexity" and equates with meaningful information. Kauffman is right that there are higher-level emergent properties that we must account for in modern science, but he overlooks the underlying information that causes and regulates the emergence of autonomous agency. Any general biology must incorporate the often-overlooked yet crucial role played by information in autonomous agency.

Note: This paper will be published in an upcoming issue of Complexity. At that time, you will be able to read it here:

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/issuetoc?ID=104534276

[ 14. June 2003, 22:11: Message edited by: Moderator ]

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Douglas D. Rudy
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Icon 1 posted 08. June 2002 08:59      Profile for Douglas D. Rudy   Email Douglas D. Rudy   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Thanks for writing this up John. I've been reading "At Home in the Universe", and just finished Steven Johnson's "Emergence". I suspect that as the flaws of the mutation/selection mechanism become more widely known, this alternative attempt to provide "order for free" (as Kauffman repeatedly claims) will be the favored replacement. I agree with your critique.

Doug Rudy

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