4.3 Article

Biological thermodynamics: Ervin Bauer and the unification of life sciences and physics

Journal

BIOSYSTEMS
Volume 235, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biosystems.2023.105089

Keywords

Biological thermodynamics; Hyper-restoration; Relational biology; Stable non-equilibrium; Thermodynamic buffering; Ervin Bauer

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Biological systems strive to maximize self-maintenance and adaptability by establishing stable non-equilibrium states that organize the fluxes of matter and energy and control metabolic processes. These states are realized in autopoietic structures that operate based on biological codes. The principle of thermodynamic buffering optimizes metabolic fluxes, and in developing systems, the principle transforms into increasing external work. Bauer's concept of the stable non-equilibrium state places thermodynamics within the framework of internal biological causality, providing a relational theory of biological thermodynamics.
Biological systems operate toward the maximization of their self-maintenance and adaptability. This is achieved through the establishment of robust self-maintaining configurations acting as attractors resistant to external and internal perturbations. Ervin Bauer (1890-1938) was the first who formulated this essential thermodynamic constraint in the operation of biological systems, which he defined as the stable non-equilibrium state. The latter appears as the basic attractor relative to which biological organization is established. The stable non-equilibrium state represents a generalized cell energy status corresponding to efficient spatiotemporal organization of the fluxes of matter and energy and constantly reproducing the conditions of self-maintenance of metabolism and controlling the rates of major metabolic fluxes that follow thermodynamically and kinetically defined computational principles. This state is realized in the autopoietic structures having closed loops of causation based on the operation of biological codes. The principle of thermodynamic buffering determines the conditions for optimization of the fluxes of load and consumption in metabolism establishing the conditions of metabolic stable non-equilibrium. In developing and evolving biological systems, the principle of stable non-equilibrium is transformed into the principle of increasing external work, which is grounded in the hyper-restorative nonequilibrium dynamics. Bauer's concept of the stable non-equilibrium state puts thermodynamics into the frames of the internal biological causality governing self-maintenance and development of living systems. It can be defined as a relational theory of biological thermodynamics since the standard to which it refers represents the actual biological function rather than the abstract state of thermodynamic equilibrium.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available