What doth life?
Life is a complex process involving the functioning of polyhierarchical biological structures in the presence of energy inflow and liquid water . It can be defined as a self-regulating process where matter undergoes cyclic, unidirectional conformation state changes that convert thermal agitation and excitation into directed motion, performing work that locally reduces entropy . Life progresses through nonspontaneous and spontaneous processes of transformation and exchange of structures of different hierarchies in spatially isolated biological systems . The definition of life could potentially be much broader, as it may be described as a form of resonating standing waves in multi-dimensional space . Life is not just about being alive, but it is a freedom from the attributes of the law, which are the markers of sovereign powers .
Answers from top 4 papers
Papers (4) | Insight |
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The paper discusses the definition of life from chemical and physical perspectives, including the reproduction of information and the dependence on a conducive environment. It also explores the concept of life as resonating standing waves in multi-dimensional space. However, it does not directly answer the question "what doth life?" | |
26 Mar 2014 2 Citations | The paper does not directly answer the question "what doth life?" The paper discusses life as a process of the functioning of polyhierarchical biological structures in the presence of energy inflow and liquid water. It also mentions that life is a complex cyclically repeated process of the origin, reproduction, aging, and death of polyhierarchical systems. However, it does not explicitly state what life does. |
Open access•Posted Content | The provided paper does not directly answer the question "what doth life?" The paper discusses the definition of life as a self-regulating process that converts thermodynamic disequilibria into directed motion. |
The provided paper does not explicitly mention what LIFE does. The paper discusses the features and capabilities of the LIFE programming language, such as structured type inheritance and the ability to combine functional and logic programming styles. However, it does not provide a specific explanation of what LIFE does. |