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“9x6” b2726 Self and the Phenomenon of Life: A Biologist Examines Life from Molecules to Humanity
- Cannon WB. (1932) The Wisdom of the Body. Norton, New York. The title
of the book was borrowed from an earlier lecture given by E.H. Starling. - Kuhn TS. (1970) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. (Foundations of
the Unity of Science, Vol. II, No. 2), 2nd ed. Univ. Chicago Press, Chicago. - Russell B. (1962) Essays in Skepticism. Wisdom Library (A Division of The
Philosophical Library), New York, p. 83. - Polanyi M. (1968) Life’s irreducible structure. Science 160: 1308–1312.
- Ernst Mayr stated that biology distinguishes itself from physics by being
information-rich. Information, of course, is the outcome of organization.
See: Mayr E. (2004) What Makes Biology Unique? Cambridge Univ. Press,
Cambridge, UK. - Hofstadter stresses pattern formation and the recursive, self-referential
properties of life, but does not provide a solution as to how this came about.
See: Hofstadter DR. (1979) Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid.
Basic Books, New York. - Wolpert L, Richards A. (1988) A Passion for Science. Oxford Univ. Press,
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zine, Dec. 26, p. 51–52; Rees MJ. (2012) From Here to Infinity. Norton,
New York. (Quoted with permission from Martin J. Rees.) - The analogy is like looking at the hardware of a computer and trying to
predict how many programs can be written to run on it.