4.3 Article

Code biology and the problem of emergence

Journal

BIOSYSTEMS
Volume 208, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biosystems.2021.104487

Keywords

Code biology; Emergence; Hierarchy theory; Downward causation; Final causes; Teleology; Infodynamics; Anticipatory systems; Dissipative structures; Transduction; Individuation; Marcello barbieri; Stanley N; Salthe; Robert Rosen; Gilbert Simondon

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The central role of codes in life and the challenge of explaining emergence, enabling constraints, and potentialities in nature are highlighted. Efforts to account for the origins and development of codes prove insufficient without a deeper understanding of how new possibilities are realized through the process of individuation.
It should now be recognized that codes are central to life and to understanding its more complex forms, including human culture. Recognizing the 'conventional' nature of codes provides solid grounds for rejecting efforts to reduce life to biochemistry and justifies according a place to semantics in life. The question I want to consider is whether this is enough. Focussing on Eigen's paradox of how a complex code could originate, I will argue that along with Barbieri's efforts to account for the origins of life based on the ribosome and then to account for the refined codes through a process of ambiguity reduction, something more is required. Barbieri has not provided an adequate account of emergence, or the basis for providing such an account. I will argue that Stanley Salthe has clarified to some extent the nature of emergence by conceptualizing it as the interpolation of new enabling constraints. Clearly, codes can be seen as enabling constraints. How this actually happens, though, is still not explained. Stuart Kauffman has grappled with this issue and shown that it radically challenges the assumptions of mainstream science going back to Newton. He has attempted to reintroduce real possibilities or potentialities into his ontology, and argued that radically new developments in nature are associated with realizing adjacent possibles. This is still not adequate. What is also involved, I will suggest, utilizing concepts developed by the French natural philosopher Gilbert Simondon, is 'transduction' as part of 'ontogenesis' of individuals in a process of 'individuation', that is, the emergence of 'individuals' from preindividual fields or milieux.

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