Cell Language Theory, The: Connecting Mind And Matter

(Elliott) #1
460 The Cell Language Theory: Connecting Mind and Matter

b2861 The Cell Language Theory: Connecting Mind and Matter “6x9”

cosmological principle which is not anthropic (i.e., does not depend on
the presence or participation of Homo sapience) and cosmolanguage prin-
ciple which is anthropic. If this analysis is right, we are led to conclude
that the traditional version of the anthropic cosmological principle [412,
413, 439] is a misnomer or at least incomplete.
As evident from above, the postulate of the self-knowing universe
(SKU) entails the presence of the cosmolanguage in our Universe which
is dual in that it can be reified either as material language or mental
language (see the figure embedded in Table 4.2). I now suggest that the
material language comprises at least two major branches — (a) particle
language, and (b) cell language (cellese) — just as the mental language
(humanese) comprises natural language, logic, mathematics, visual lan-
guage, and music. In section 4.4, we discussed the isomorphism between
cell and human languages. It is here postulated that the same set of
semiotic/linguistic principles shared by cell and human languages
applies to “particle language” as indicated in Table 4.2.

10.19 The Universe as a Self-Organizing Musical
Instrument (USOMI)
Charles Peirce believed that there are “simple concepts applicable to every
subject” [372]. The purpose of this Section is to bring to the attention of
readers some recent evidences indicating that “vibrational motions”,
“periodic motions”, or “oscillations” of material systems may be one of
the simple concepts that applies to everything in the Universe — from
bond vibrations in molecules, to concentration waves inside the cell, to
sound waves in human speech, to electromagnetic waves from the sun, the
brain, and iPhones [26, 27, 441, 442], and to the gravitational waves
recently confirmed [443].
Petoukhov [158] has accumulated an impressive amount of evi-
dence during the past decade that genes exhibit properties resembling
mechanical systems executing vibrational motions, since both genetic
and vibratory systems reveal similar regularities when analyzed using
matrix algebra (see Chapter 5). For example, Punnett squares in molec-
ular genetics [444] show the patterns of allele combinations that are
similar to the patterns of frequency arrangements in the tensor products
of matrices representing vibrational motions of mechanical systems.

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