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Patterns can’t explain life’s complexity
Patterns can’t explain life’s complexity

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Yesterday, in the first of our two-part series on the nature of thoughts and thinkers, Michael Levin argued that thinkers don’t need bodies, and that there may be no real difference between thinkers and thoughts. In today’s article, Perry Marshall . . .

Yesterday, in the first of our two-part series on the nature of thoughts and thinkers, Michael Levin argued that thinkers don’t need bodies, and that there may be no real difference between thinkers and thoughts. In today’s article, Perry Marshall disagrees.Perry Marshall challenges the case made in Michael Levin’s article last Thursday that patterns are alive, and that all life forms and thought are living patterns. Marshall argues that bacteria and viruses are more complicated than we imagine, but this is not a basis to claim that all lifeforms and thought can be explained by patterns. Michael Levin insists the line between thoughts and thinkers is blurry. Other life forms might exist at forms and scales entirely foreign to us.He’s right. However… we don’t have a snowball’s chance of recognizing those, until we first acknowledge the living capacities of our own bodies and back yards.In 1955, Alfred Hitchcock aired “Breakdown” on…

Read the full article which is published on IAI TV (external link)

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