We illustrate, using didactical examples, how algorithmic information (written, for example, into a computer programme) is required to establish the structure of an organised system, based on a prior article that has been updated (either simple or complex). If a leading algorithmic information is assigned to govern the evolution of the generating process, ordered structures can be obtained as attractors both by some dynamics starting from sequential initial conditions (order from order) and by some dynamics starting from random initial conditions (order from chance). The creation of some structured structure, such as an organ of a living system, in the lack of knowledge is so implausible that it is impossible. get at the conclusion that static models of the human heart should be proposed. Starting from ordered initial conditions, random sparse initial conditions, or, more realistically, random cellular automata, systems are formed (so that any mother cell is allowed to generate a daughter cell only in a random contiguous location). Not all algorithmic information can be compressed into a string shorter than the sequence of its original individual code digits, as Gregory Chaitin pointed out (incompressible information string). A question about DNA and, more broadly, genetics remains unanswered. Any biological data: should it be considered a compressible or incompressible code string? We regarded the sequence of the co-ordinates of each sphere (roughly modelling a cell) as an uncompressed string in our example of anatomic human heart model, but a compressed programme string appears to be only capable of producing less realistic models.
Author(s) Details
Alberto
Strumia
I.N.D.A.M.F.
Severi, Italy
View Book :- https://stm.bookpi.org/NUPSR-V10/article/view/2384
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