Title
Computational Realizations of Living Systems
Abstract
Robert Rosen's central theorem states that organisms are fundamentally different from machines, mainly because they are “closed with respect to effcient causation.” The proof for this theorem rests on two crucial assumptions. The first is that for a certain class of systems (“mechanisms”) analytic modeling is the inverse of synthetic modeling. The second is that aspects of machines can be modeled using relational models and that these relational models are themselves refined by at least one analytic model. We show that both assumptions are unjustified. We conclude that these results cast serious doubts on the validity of Rosen's proof.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.1162/artl.2007.13.4.369
Artificial Life
Keywords
Field
DocType
(M,R) systems,Closure,analytic model,relational model,synthetic model
Inverse,Central limit theorem,Living systems,Computer science,Artificial intelligence,Relational model,Analytic model,Machine learning,Computer programming
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
13
4
1064-5462
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
5
0.62
3
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Dominique Chu14912.07
Weng Kin Ho2235.41