Intelligent cells, a trillion times more complex than anyone has understood: By evolution, or design?
https://reasonandscience.catsboard.com/t3057-intelligent-cells-a-trillion-times-more-complex-than-anyone-has-understood-by-evolution-or-design
Biologist Brian Ford:
“The microscopic world of the single, living cell mirrors our own in so many ways: cells are essentially autonomous, sentient and ingenious. In the lives of single cells we can perceive the roots of our own intelligence.”
The following is a mind-blowing, glorious description of the cell, giving honor to our unfathomable, incomprehensible, masterful engineer, creator, God, and Lord.
When we observe within a living cell behavior including the continual and carefully choreographed machinations of mitochondria, the endless migration of granules and voiding of vacuoles, the conduction of discrete particles in two-way streams of cytoplasm like traffic on a highway, the meticulous changes of position of the nucleus in diatoms during division, and the cautious inspection of prey by a predatory ciliate, then we can conceive that the cell may be a billion, or even a trillion times more complex than anyone has understood.
As Mayer et al. put it, after considering the vast range of potential configurations that a single transmembrane receptor complex for platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) can adopt, the activated receptor looks less like a machine and more like a pleiomorphic ensemble or probability cloud of an almost infinite number of possible states, each of which may differ in its biological activity. ( Mayer, 2009 , p. 81.2)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2776906/
We have raised our sights better to comprehend the extent of our ignorance, and now we should apply our own native intelligence to attempting to unravel from whence it came. The entire living cell is an incomprehensible miracle, and its multi-faceted ability to communicate, to take decisions, and to respond to unforeseeable situations with a degree of intelligence can account for many observed phenomena that are otherwise unexplained. Forget reductionism: the whole living cell, as an entity, now commands our attention as never before.
The living cell exhibits ingenuity, and perhaps even intelligence.
Each cell knows its appropriate size, age, time of day, and own location. At least a thousand diverse types of neurons have specific sizes and shapes to fit into particular neural circuits. Neurons emit electrical pulses at a frequency of around 40 Hz, known as neuron spikes, recordings of which are familiar in neuroscience. Neuron spike timing is now recognized as important. I became intrigued by envisaging the spikes, not as rapidly repeated signals, but as discrete impulses bearing encoded information.
There are many attempts to emulate the brain through digital modeling. For example, the Blue Brain project3 in Switzerland is attempting to create a digital emulation of the entire mammalian brain by reverse-engineering brain circuitry. This modeling of the mind through digital data cannot succeed, since the neuron is not a simple digital device. A single neuron would be more than enough for us to tackle, and even that is probably not amenable to our primitive methodologies.
Believing that the genes alone mediate the workings of a cell simply as a blueprint cannot be supported. The living cell is volitional and appreciates its individual ability to analyze data and take decisions. The unfathomable complexity of a living cell is not generally appreciated; even a simulation of the way mitochondrion moves would be beyond our current conventions. Emulating fragments of our trivial understanding does not explain their intricacy for cells are intelligent, and they live lives that we have hardly begun to address.
Cells need to know where they are for many reasons. But, it is very challenging for an individual to know its exact location relative to a large outside world, without GPS. Despite great difficulties, remarkably, individual cells can make complex calculations and decisions based on their exact relations to other cells and organs.
Cells use data from different sources such as morphogenic fields of diffusible molecules and electrical gradients and complex networks of genes. As well as being able to calculate many different factors and taking them into account, cells are, at the same time, signaling back and forth to other cells, sharing information that helps determines the exact location.
While it might seem simple for cells to measure a gradient, in fact, it is not, because many variables can affect the measurement. To hone the accuracy of information from diffusing molecules, electrical gradients and mechanical signals, it must use feedback loops, multiple comparative measurements, timed measurements, complex gene regulation, principles of self-organization and very specific cell-to-cell signaling. Cells become veritable mathematicians to answer the questions. This post will describe some of the problems that cells must overcome to have accurate location information that is critical for brain structures and immune function.
Cells are able to analyze multiple competing signals and make decisions how to use them. Each signal triggers a cascade that stimulates specific genetic networks. But, some of the information is more accurate than others and decisions have to be made to determine the exact location.
Cells use great complexity of cellular language. One type of communication between cells is touching and directly transporting data such as with synapses. Transmitted signals include immune cytokines and chemokines (attractants), neurotransmitters of many types, small and large RNAs, small peptides and hormones. Special plant signals are kinocidins. Signals can work either locally or at a very long distance. For the signal to work, the cells must manufacture the specific protein receptors and have them ready in the membranes.
Cells use molecules that travel between cells for many local measurements. How can an individual cell be so intelligent? How can an individual cell integrate so many different kinds of information and then act in concert with many other cells? Where does this intelligence lie? Where is the direction for all of this? The cell must be tied to other information sources such as mind.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0079610717301748?via%3Dihub
https://jonlieffmd.com/blog/human-brain/intelligent-cells-know-their-place
https://reasonandscience.catsboard.com/t3057-intelligent-cells-a-trillion-times-more-complex-than-anyone-has-understood-by-evolution-or-design
Biologist Brian Ford:
“The microscopic world of the single, living cell mirrors our own in so many ways: cells are essentially autonomous, sentient and ingenious. In the lives of single cells we can perceive the roots of our own intelligence.”
The following is a mind-blowing, glorious description of the cell, giving honor to our unfathomable, incomprehensible, masterful engineer, creator, God, and Lord.
When we observe within a living cell behavior including the continual and carefully choreographed machinations of mitochondria, the endless migration of granules and voiding of vacuoles, the conduction of discrete particles in two-way streams of cytoplasm like traffic on a highway, the meticulous changes of position of the nucleus in diatoms during division, and the cautious inspection of prey by a predatory ciliate, then we can conceive that the cell may be a billion, or even a trillion times more complex than anyone has understood.
As Mayer et al. put it, after considering the vast range of potential configurations that a single transmembrane receptor complex for platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) can adopt, the activated receptor looks less like a machine and more like a pleiomorphic ensemble or probability cloud of an almost infinite number of possible states, each of which may differ in its biological activity. ( Mayer, 2009 , p. 81.2)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2776906/
We have raised our sights better to comprehend the extent of our ignorance, and now we should apply our own native intelligence to attempting to unravel from whence it came. The entire living cell is an incomprehensible miracle, and its multi-faceted ability to communicate, to take decisions, and to respond to unforeseeable situations with a degree of intelligence can account for many observed phenomena that are otherwise unexplained. Forget reductionism: the whole living cell, as an entity, now commands our attention as never before.
The living cell exhibits ingenuity, and perhaps even intelligence.
Each cell knows its appropriate size, age, time of day, and own location. At least a thousand diverse types of neurons have specific sizes and shapes to fit into particular neural circuits. Neurons emit electrical pulses at a frequency of around 40 Hz, known as neuron spikes, recordings of which are familiar in neuroscience. Neuron spike timing is now recognized as important. I became intrigued by envisaging the spikes, not as rapidly repeated signals, but as discrete impulses bearing encoded information.
There are many attempts to emulate the brain through digital modeling. For example, the Blue Brain project3 in Switzerland is attempting to create a digital emulation of the entire mammalian brain by reverse-engineering brain circuitry. This modeling of the mind through digital data cannot succeed, since the neuron is not a simple digital device. A single neuron would be more than enough for us to tackle, and even that is probably not amenable to our primitive methodologies.
Believing that the genes alone mediate the workings of a cell simply as a blueprint cannot be supported. The living cell is volitional and appreciates its individual ability to analyze data and take decisions. The unfathomable complexity of a living cell is not generally appreciated; even a simulation of the way mitochondrion moves would be beyond our current conventions. Emulating fragments of our trivial understanding does not explain their intricacy for cells are intelligent, and they live lives that we have hardly begun to address.
Cells need to know where they are for many reasons. But, it is very challenging for an individual to know its exact location relative to a large outside world, without GPS. Despite great difficulties, remarkably, individual cells can make complex calculations and decisions based on their exact relations to other cells and organs.
Cells use data from different sources such as morphogenic fields of diffusible molecules and electrical gradients and complex networks of genes. As well as being able to calculate many different factors and taking them into account, cells are, at the same time, signaling back and forth to other cells, sharing information that helps determines the exact location.
While it might seem simple for cells to measure a gradient, in fact, it is not, because many variables can affect the measurement. To hone the accuracy of information from diffusing molecules, electrical gradients and mechanical signals, it must use feedback loops, multiple comparative measurements, timed measurements, complex gene regulation, principles of self-organization and very specific cell-to-cell signaling. Cells become veritable mathematicians to answer the questions. This post will describe some of the problems that cells must overcome to have accurate location information that is critical for brain structures and immune function.
Cells are able to analyze multiple competing signals and make decisions how to use them. Each signal triggers a cascade that stimulates specific genetic networks. But, some of the information is more accurate than others and decisions have to be made to determine the exact location.
Cells use great complexity of cellular language. One type of communication between cells is touching and directly transporting data such as with synapses. Transmitted signals include immune cytokines and chemokines (attractants), neurotransmitters of many types, small and large RNAs, small peptides and hormones. Special plant signals are kinocidins. Signals can work either locally or at a very long distance. For the signal to work, the cells must manufacture the specific protein receptors and have them ready in the membranes.
Cells use molecules that travel between cells for many local measurements. How can an individual cell be so intelligent? How can an individual cell integrate so many different kinds of information and then act in concert with many other cells? Where does this intelligence lie? Where is the direction for all of this? The cell must be tied to other information sources such as mind.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0079610717301748?via%3Dihub
https://jonlieffmd.com/blog/human-brain/intelligent-cells-know-their-place
Last edited by Otangelo on Thu Dec 10, 2020 9:27 am; edited 5 times in total