Life Force, Compensation, Connections & the Ebb and Flow of Nature

In the latest post in my previous thread I quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson. The first paragraph read:

Polarity, or action and reaction, we meet in every part of nature; in darkness and light, in heat and cold; in the ebb and flow of waters; in male and female; in the inspiration and expiration of plants and animals; in the systole and diastole of the heart; in the undulations of fluids and of sound; in the centrifugal and centripetal gravity; in electricity, galvanism, and chemical affinity. Superinduce magnetism at one end of a needle, the opposite magnetism takes place at the other end. If the south attracts, the north repels. To empty here, you must condense there. An inevitable dualism bisects nature, so that each thing is a half, and suggests another thing to make it whole; as, spirit, matter; man, woman; subjective, objective; in, out; upper, under; motion, rest; yea, nay.

The term, ‘life force’ will most probably invoke many criticisms and objections. But if we take it to mean observed vitality and let it stand at that without speculating any further, we can study its ‘ebb and flow’ in the natural world around us. We can see these processes in a wide variety of life forms.

I look around my neighbourhood and see winter fast approaching. In preparation the deciduous trees have all but shed their leaves, hedgehogs are beginning their hibernation and the metabolism of frogs is slowing right down. I can see in all of these organisms a reduction in vitality. The life force is being withdrawn and it will resurface in the spring.

It is obvious that a young spring oak leaf has more vitality than a piece of the tree’s bark, and a mating wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus) has more vitality than one in which much of its tissue is frozen solid during winter.

Animals in general have more freedom than plants and some animals are not so tied to a particular environment. Many birds are free to migrate long distances. There is only one species of bird that is known to hibernate and that is the common poorwill

Heterothermy is common among animals and has convergently evolved multiple times. Some animals enter a state of torpor daily in addition to annual hibernaton.

Instead of having their lifestyle dictated by a particular environment migratory animals are able to move to more suitable surroundings. Many animals that reside permanently in a specific location compensate for this restriction by becoming dormant through the winter. There are many examples of compensatory behaviour in nature. Elephants compensate for lacking a pair of dexterous appendages by having one dexterous trunk that can be used in conjunction with their tusks for handling objects. Birds become very adept at using their beaks for construction work and parrots use their beaks and feet in a highly coordinated manner.

Like parrots and elephants, cetaceans are also highly intelligent animals and like the former their creative skills are restricted. And because they are highly adapted to existing in an aquatic environment these skills are even more restricted compared to parrots or elephants. Their lack of hind limbs and extremely specialised forelimbs ensure that this is the case.

Animals at the opposite extreme to the cetaceans can be found among the insects and arachnids.. Here can be found master creative builders but their individual intelligence is very poor compared to advanced mammals and birds. Cetaceans must return to the surface to breathe but some insects manufacture an aqualung for themselves allowing them to remain underwater while breathing. The bubbles used will need to be replenished from time to time but they can take in oxygen from the surrounding water extending their usable life.

Due to our creativity in shielding ourselves from the local environmental conditions we humans can survive and remain active anywhere on the planet.

Most of the vital energy of a plant is taken up with growth. In the case of us humans the energy of growth is prominent up to the point of reaching maturity and then our vitality begins to decline. During our life as mature adults a high percentage of our metabolic energy is allocated to the seat of our creative activity, the brain. Our conscious, creative activity come at the expense of the decline of the body. To compensate for serving our organ of consciousness our plant-like vitality must decline accordingly. A continual balance must be held between ebb and flow.

 

 

28 thoughts on “Life Force, Compensation, Connections & the Ebb and Flow of Nature

  1. we can study its ‘ebb and flow’ in the natural world around us.

    The ebb and flow of life is pretty much the same thing as the struggle for survival.

    Animals in general have more freedom than plants and some animals are not so tied to a particular environment.

    The plants have the freedom to just stay where they are and bask in the sun. The animals are compelled to keep moving.

    Many birds are free to migrate long distances.

    But are they free to not migrate?

  2. Neil Rickert:

    we can study its ‘ebb and flow’ in the natural world around us.

    The ebb and flow of life is pretty much the same thing as the struggle for survival.

    It’s much broader than that. Would you say that apoptosis was concerned with the struggle for survival? Are the cells in a limb bud competing for survival?

    Animals in general have more freedom than plants and some animals are not so tied to a particular environment.

    The plants have the freedom to just stay where they are and bask in the sun. The animals are compelled to keep moving.

    It’s not a matter of compulsion. I am talking about freedom in the physical sense. Think of it in the same way that a moored boat in a storm might break free from its tethers.

    Many birds are free to migrate long distances.

    But are they free to not migrate?

    Again I mean in the physical sense. Think of garden birds and frogs in the UK. Some of these birds feed on insects. As winter approaches and the insects become scarce in a wave from north to south the birds are able to keep pace with the wave whereas frogs are not. The birds have more freedom and the frogs are more restricted.

  3. Neil Rickert: CharlieM: Are the cells in a limb bud competing for survival?

    Yes.

    You are looking at things too narrowly.

    Well we could discuss apoptosis in which a cell kills itself in a precisely controlled and highly regulated manner. It does this in such a way that ensures its contents are not just spilled out into the surrounding area, which, if allowed to happen, would cause damage and disruption to the tissue as a whole.

    Can you justify your claim and explain in what way these cells are competing for survival? Maybe you believe some cells are also competing for self-destruction 🙂

  4. graham2:
    What is the point of the CharlieM post ?

    I was hoping to stimulate sensible discussion. Already it has stimulated me into having a closer look at torpor, hibernation, migration and now apoptosis.

    An interesting fact I have discovered is that the word now used for a type of programmed cell death was in general use in ancient Greece to signify the falling of petals from a plant and leaves from a tree.

    Another interesting area I would like to pursue is apoptosis in amphibians. It would seem that although it features highly in amphibian metamorphosis the forelimbs develop by way of individual growth of the digits and not by apoptosis of the intermediate tissue as in reptiles and higher vertebrates.

    The cycles of life and death throughout nature at all levels is a good example of the fractal nature of the living world.

    If you don’t find anything of interest in whatever this thread throws up feel free to ignore it.

  5. CharlieM: Well we could discuss apoptosis in which a cell kills itself in a precisely controlled and highly regulated manner.

    That’s still part of the struggle for survival of the whole organism. As I already said, you are looking at things too narrowly.

  6. Neil Rickert:

    CharlieM: Well we could discuss apoptosis in which a cell kills itself in a precisely controlled and highly regulated manner.

    That’s still part of the struggle for survival of the whole organism. As I already said, you are looking at things too narrowly.

    Thanks for giving me something to think about.

    So individual cells sacrifice their existence to assist the organism in its struggle for survival. Parts being sacrificed for the good of the whole.

  7. CharlieM:
    So individual cells sacrifice their existence to assist the organism in its struggle for survival. Parts being sacrificed for the good of the whole.

    The rationale, of course, being that an individual cell’s loss ultimately benefits identical gene copies in other cells – in the germline. That’s what ‘the good of’ ultimately relates to, since the somatic organism does not last more than a single generation. Somatic cells that are not lost through apoptosis are lost instead through organismal death, so are lost either way.

    Something else to think about (though from experience I hold out little hope you will) is that developmental apoptotic patterns are consistent throughout a species. How is that ensured, mechanistically?

  8. Allan Miller:

    CharlieM:
    So individual cells sacrifice their existence to assist the organism in its struggle for survival. Parts being sacrificed for the good of the whole.

    The rationale, of course, being that an individual cell’s loss ultimately benefits identical gene copies in other cells – in the germline. That’s what ‘the good of’ ultimately relates to, since the somatic organism does not last more than a single generation. Somatic cells that are not lost through apoptosis are lost instead through organismal death, so are lost either way.

    It benefits the whole organism and ultimately life as a whole in its progress through time. There is nothing ultimate about gene copies. As part of life they never exist in isolation. What is it you think is benefitting from multiple gene copies? Why would a pattern of chemicals benefit from being copied?

    Something else to think about (though from experience I hold out little hope you will) is that developmental apoptotic patterns are consistent throughout a species. How is that ensured, mechanistically?

    Life maintains consistency by means of subsequent generations keeping the same processes going at multiple levels within each organism. From patterns of gene expression networks at the lowest level to sexual intercourse at a much higher level. The activity of cells is just one intermediate level of process. There is no obvious privileged level.

    The developmental apoptotic patterns are dynamic processes. And geneticists these days are moving on from envisioning genes as being in control to considering genetic networks to be the controlling factors. As in this review

    In effect, genes do not have independent “agency”; for the most part they are simply cogs in the complex machinery of GRNs, and interpreting their mutant phenotypes is often difficult. In contrast, the genes for which there is an obvious connection between the mutant form and an altered phenotype are usually ultimate outputs of GRNs, such as pigmentation genes, hemoglobins, and enzymes of intermediary metabolism. These genes, however, also lack true autonomy, being activated in response to the operation of GRNs. There-fore, to fully understand how a gene functions, one must comprehend the larger systems in which they operate. Genetics, in this sense, is becoming systems biology, a point that has also been made by others (see, for example, Keller 2005).In effect, since genes can only be defined with respect to their products, and those products are governed by GRNs, the particular cellular and regulatory (GRN) contexts involved maybe considered additional “dimensions” vital to specifying agene’s function and identity. The examples of “gene sharing,” in which the function of the gene is wholly a function of its cellular context, illustrate this in a particularly vivid way. The “gene”—however it comes to be defined—can there-fore be seen not as a three-dimensional entity but as a multi-dimensional one.

    They say that currently the term “gene” is “shrouded in confusion and ambiguity”. Talking about the unit of heredity, they “feel that it is now clear that no such generic universal unit exists”, and so they propose a tentative definition of a gene as:

    a DNA sequence (whose component segments do not necessarily need to be physically contiguous) that specifies one or more sequence-related RNAs/proteins that are both evoked by GRNs and participate as elements in GRNs, often with indirect effects, or as outputs of GRNs, the latter yielding more direct phenotypic effects.

    This definition deliberately omits genes as units of heredity.

  9. CharlieM:There is nothing ultimate about gene copies. As part of life they never exist in isolation.

    Yawn.

    What is it you think is benefitting from multiple gene copies? Why would a pattern of chemicals benefit from being copied?

    The more frequently a sequence is copied relative to alternatives, the more of that sequence there is. Such sequences are more successful than alternatives. If promoting apoptosis in specific cells at specific developmental stages is the consequence of gene action, and that promotion causes the bearers of those genes to produce more offspring than those with alleles of such genes, there is clearly a ‘benefit’ to the more successful gene, and not merely to its bearer. Gene sequences survive a specific bodily instance, the rest of the organism doesn’t, so it certainly doesn’t benefit that organism over the long term. It’s gone. What’s left are its genes (wrapped, I am well aware, in a cell, so there is no need to point that mundane fact out yet again).

  10. CharlieM: Life maintains consistency by means of subsequent generations keeping the same processes going at multiple levels within each organism.

    And how do they do that? What ensures this generational consistency? It has to be small enough to stick in a gamete. I could give you a clue …

  11. Allan Miller: And I should care what they think because … ?

    OK, just to expand on this, I have said many, many times that ‘the gene’ in gene-centrism is not the physiological unit – the DNA ‘for’ a trait – but the evolutionary one: a haplotype. It gains its independent character through replication and recombinational slicing, not through its organismal effect, which may undoubtedly be complex and multi-layered.

    Yet here you are peddling a demand for a redefinition of the physiological gene. Using The Words Of Others, yet. Perhaps I should just don my Dawkins glove-puppet and join you in a cut-paste battle, to save time.

  12. Allan Miller:

    CharlieM:There is nothing ultimate about gene copies. As part of life they never exist in isolation.

    Yawn.

    What is it you think is benefitting from multiple gene copies? Why would a pattern of chemicals benefit from being copied?

    The more frequently a sequence is copied relative to alternatives, the more of that sequence there is. Such sequences are more successful than alternatives. If promoting apoptosis in specific cells at specific developmental stages is the consequence of gene action, and that promotion causes the bearers of those genes to produce more offspring than those with alleles of such genes, there is clearly a ‘benefit’ to the more successful gene, and not merely to its bearer. Gene sequences survive a specific bodily instance, the rest of the organism doesn’t, so it certainly doesn’t benefit that organism over the long term. It’s gone. What’s left are its genes (wrapped, I am well aware, in a cell, so there is no need to point that mundane fact out yet again)

    You get bored of me saying that genes never exist in isolation and then you go on to speak about them as if they were isolated units.

    Organisms that die are not just “gone”. They provide food which ensures the continuation of life at a higher level. Death ensures the success of life, or to put it another way life benefits from death. And life is not just a repetition of the same pattern over and over, it is a progression with what is to come building on what went before.

    In the case of higher animals your “successful gene” would soon disappear were it not for the copulating organisms that ensured its continued existence.

  13. Allan Miller:

    CharlieM: Life maintains consistency by means of subsequent generations keeping the same processes going at multiple levels within each organism.

    And how do they do that? What ensures this generational consistency? It has to be small enough to stick in a gamete. I could give you a clue

    Quantum physics teaches us that at the molecular level the rules of time and space that we experience at our everyday level do not apply. You talk about gametes as if they were miniature Lego bricks.

  14. Allan Miller:

    CharlieM:
    This definition deliberately omits genes as units of heredity.

    And I should care what they think because … ?

    Because they might have something interesting to say about genetics.

  15. Allan Miller: Allan Miller: And I should care what they think because … ?

    OK, just to expand on this, I have said many, many times that ‘the gene’ in gene-centrism is not the physiological unit – the DNA ‘for’ a trait – but the evolutionary one: a haplotype. It gains its independent character through replication and recombinational slicing, not through its organismal effect, which may undoubtedly be complex and multi-layered.

    Yet here you are peddling a demand for a redefinition of the physiological gene. Using The Words Of Others, yet. Perhaps I should just don my Dawkins glove-puppet and join you in a cut-paste battle, to save time.

    I would be interested to read any quotes or links that you wish to provide. Just about everything I have ever learned about life has been stimulated by the words of others. And quite often it is those who we disagree with that can teach us the most.

  16. CharlieM: Me: Yawn.

    Charlie: You get bored of me saying that genes never exist in isolation and then you go on to speak about them as if they were isolated units.

    No. I’ve already pointed out, a lot, that ‘genes never appear in isolation’ is not an effective counter to gene centrism. Gene centrism is not a stance that requires them to appear ‘naked’, and nothing I have written in the paragraphs you quote considers them in that way. Nonetheless, genes (by which I mean recombinationally-segmented haplotypes) really do increase or decrease in frequency in the population, and through recombination, they pass down the generations independently of other such linkage units. They don’t ever have to be ‘naked’ for this to happen.

    Organisms that die are not just “gone”. They provide food which ensures the continuation of life at a higher level. Death ensures the success of life, or to put it another way life benefits from death.

    Sure. Their molecules might last a year or two. Then they are ‘gone’. Where would we be without ‘gotchas’? 🤔

    And life is not just a repetition of the same pattern over and over, it is a progression with what is to come building on what went before.

    Cast things in vague enough terms and you can refute just about anything. Fact remains, apoptotic developmental patterns are repetitious.

    In the case of higher animals your “successful gene” would soon disappear were it not for the copulating organisms that ensured its continued existence.

    And? All genes depend on others to some degree. It’s a collective endeavour.

    You think an interest in the opposite sex is nothing to do with genes? Genes that maintain such interest are definitively ‘successful’. Alleles tending toward disinterest would tend to be lost; to be unsuccessful.

  17. CharlieM:
    Quantum physics teaches us that at the molecular level the rules of time and space that we experience at our everyday level do not apply.

    Bully for quantum physics. Now, back to biology …

    You talk about gametes as if they were miniature Lego bricks.

    I do?

    I tend towards the view that an organism’s developmental arc is ‘determined’ (in a weak sense) by the contents of the gametes that formed its zygote (I’m aware that environment can also play a role; spare me the gotcha). That the consistencies within a population are ultimately due to genetic consistency, likewise the inconsistencies. You go to considerable lengths to evade this line of reasoning, inventing all manner of extra-genomic activity without recognising that the cellular extra-genomic activity you point to is actually genomic activity, once removed.

    But then you go beyond that, to something ‘beyond the cell’, or mystically ‘within it’ but not made of matter. If there is some extra-gametic component that influences development consistently – that gives the illusion of heritability without actually being inherited – I feel the onus is on its proponent to provide some evidence.

  18. CharlieM: I would be interested to read any quotes or links that you wish to provide.

    Read The Selfish Gene and then The Extended Phenotype, then. Saves me a lot of typing.

  19. Allan Miller:

    Me: Yawn.

    Charlie: You get bored of me saying that genes never exist in isolation and then you go on to speak about them as if they were isolated units.

    No. I’ve already pointed out, a lot, that ‘genes never appear in isolation’ is not an effective counter to gene centrism. Gene centrism is not a stance that requires them to appear ‘naked’, and nothing I have written in the paragraphs you quote considers them in that way. Nonetheless, genes (by which I mean recombinationally-segmented haplotypes) really do increase or decrease in frequency in the population, and through recombination, they pass down the generations independently of other such linkage units. They don’t ever have to be ‘naked’ for this to happen.

    I’m not arguing against gene centrism, I am pointing out that it is not just chemicals that are transferred from parent to offspring. There is the very important matter of molecular processes that are constant and continue through the generations.Here is a representation of DNA replication.

    At least ten proteins are involved in DNA replication. Here is a short description of the most important ones for those who may be less familiar with this highly regulated process that is ubiquitous to life. DNA helicase is required to open up the double helix to expose the single strands. Single strand binding protein prepares the DNA for replication. A sliding ring holds the DNA polymerase onto the DNA strand. An erasable RNA primer, which is manufactured by DNA primase, prepares the fragment of lagging strand to be copied. Accuracy is vital to replication and so the system has proofreading built in. The DNA polymerase can recognise a mistake, back up to repair it and then continue in the normal direction. This results in an accuracy which produces only about one mistake per billion bases copied. Of course this is only one aspect of the process of cell division. Processes that are going on continuously countless times in our bodies as we speak.

    Organisms that die are not just “gone”. They provide food which ensures the continuation of life at a higher level. Death ensures the success of life, or to put it another way life benefits from death.

    Sure. Their molecules might last a year or two. Then they are ‘gone’. Where would we be without ‘gotchas’?

    Gone where? Nature is not wasteful and always has a ready supply of materials waiting to be used. Something to think about; in that video clip of DNA replication where do the nucleotides that are added to the strands come from?

    And life is not just a repetition of the same pattern over and over, it is a progression with what is to come building on what went before.

    Cast things in vague enough terms and you can refute just about anything. Fact remains, apoptotic developmental patterns are repetitious.

    Including the dynamic patterns of process.

    In the case of higher animals your “successful gene” would soon disappear were it not for the copulating organisms that ensured its continued existence.

    And? All genes depend on others to some degree. It’s a collective endeavour.

    Exactly. A collective endeavour involving all levels and complex systems of feedback loops between proteins and nucleotides. This is a major difference between life and machines. Unlike machines, life does not operate by the simple rules of cause and effect.

    You think an interest in the opposite sex is nothing to do with genes? Genes that maintain such interest are definitively ‘successful’. Alleles tending toward disinterest would tend to be lost; to be unsuccessful.

    Of course genes are involved but they are not primary in some imagined causal chain.

    Below is a screenshot from the linked video which I have anthropomorphised just for fun 🙂

  20. Allan Miller:

    CharlieM:
    Quantum physics teaches us that at the molecular level the rules of time and space that we experience at our everyday level do not apply.

    Bully for quantum physics. Now, back to biology…

    You think that anyone researching molecular biology can ignore quantum physics? This is precisely the level at which quantum effects must be considered.

    You talk about gametes as if they were miniature Lego bricks.

    I do?

    I tend towards the view that an organism’s developmental arc is ‘determined’ (in a weak sense) by the contents of the gametes that formed its zygote (I’m aware that environment can also play a role; spare me the gotcha). That the consistencies within a population are ultimately due to genetic consistency, likewise the inconsistencies. You go to considerable lengths to evade this line of reasoning, inventing all manner of extra-genomic activity without recognising that the cellular extra-genomic activity you point to is actually genomic activity, once removed.

    Do you believe that your thoughts and feelings are nothing more than genes at work? And don’t forget, genomic activity involves more than the genes. The process of DNA replication is much more consistent throughout life than any single gene.

    But then you go beyond that, to something ‘beyond the cell’, or mystically ‘within it’ but not made of matter. If there is some extra-gametic component that influences development consistently – that gives the illusion of heritability without actually being inherited – I feel the onus is on its proponent to provide some evidence.

    There is nothing mystical beyond or within the cell. Think about what gets passed on from parent to offspring. It is a cell with all its material plus, of equal, if not even more importance, the cellular activity. Each new life is dynamic right from the very beginning.

  21. Allan Miller:

    CharlieM: I would be interested to read any quotes or links that you wish to provide.

    Read The Selfish Gene and then The Extended Phenotype, then. Saves me a lot of typing

    Been there! Do you have anything else?

  22. Steiner

    The root is really the “head” of the plant, which stretches its reproductive organs out to the wide spaces of the world, while its head is attracted by the centre of the Earth. Man is the opposite of this: his head is at the top of his body, and below are the organs which the plant spreads out to the Sun. The animal comes in between: its body is horizontal. If you revolve a plant through 90 degrees, you get the position of the animal; turn it through 180 degrees and you get the position of man.

    The Darwins

    The course pursued by the radicle in penetrating the ground must be determined by the tip; hence it has acquired such diverse kinds of sensitivities. It is hardly an exaggeration to say that the tip of the radicle thus endowed, and having the power of directing the movements of the adjoining parts, acts like the brain of one of the lower animals; the brain being seated within the anterior end of the body; receiving impressions from the senseorgans, and directing the several movements.

    From The ‘root-brain’ hypothesis of Charles and Francis Darwin: Revival after more than 125 years

    A novel idea, and one in accord with the Darwins’ ‘Root-Brain’ hypothesis (Box 1), is that plants are evidently anchored in the soil by their ‘heads’, exposing their sexual organs to the air and to prospective pollinators

    Researchers have claimed that:

    Neurons and plant root cells may grow using a similar mechanism.

    These observations demonstrate a polarity and indicate a connection between plants and higher animals.

    There is no escaping the fact that plants are intelligent beings even if that intelligence is rooted in the earth. Intelligence exists at the level of cells, of organs, of organisms, of populations, and of life as a whole. Life is driven by its innate intelligence.

  23. There are many examples of the innate intelligence of plants. A germinating seed lying on the ground has to overcome Newton’s third law. In trying to force its way into the earth the growing root would end up just raising the seed above the surface were it not for the fact that the seed first anchors itself to the earth using root hairs. This gives it enough purchase to penetrate the earth.

    In ‘The Power of Movement in Plants’ Darwin wrote:

    Even with seeds lying o the bare surface, the first developed root-hairs, by becoming attached to stones or other objects on the surface, are able to hold down the upper part of the radicle, whilst the tip penetrates the ground. Sachs has shown how well and closely root-hairs adapt themselves by growth to the most irregular particles in the soil and become firmly attached to them.

    In the tropics epiphytic plants which grow on trees, have an even harder challenge of anchoring themselves firmly onto the tree in order for them to have any chance of developing further.

    One type of orchid has a clever way of achieving this:

    Unlike most orchid seeds that are nothing more than a thin sheath surrounding a tiny embryo, the seeds of Chiloschista have additional parts. These “appendages,” which are specialized seed coat cells, are tightly wound into coils. Upon contact with water, these coils shoot out like tiny grappling hooks that grab on to moss and bark alike. In doing so, they anchor the seed in place. By securing their hold on the trunk or branch of a tree, the seeds are much more likely to germinate and grow. This is one of the most extreme examples of seed specialization in the orchid family.

    Spiralling its way to success.

  24. I was going to say more in my reply to Allan here,but I know Nonlin has been worried about the thread being cluttered with off-topic discussions which, I admit I’ve had a hand in. So I’ll continue below some further comments I was going to make.

    Much of what I write below has been inspired by Steiner’s lecture, ‘Probability and Chance, Fritz Mauthner’s Studies of Improbability’, from a series of lectures, Chance, Necessity and Providence. The lecture in written form can be found here and in audio can be found here But these are my interpretations and so any errors of thought are mine alone.

    Every organism is formed through a balance of inner formative forces and outer formative forces. It is only the outer formative forces that can have mechanistic causes but the limits of these forces are governed by the inner formative forces. These inner formative forces have mechanistic aspects but primary causes do not stem from mechanical forces.

    A good example of external causation is demonstrated by the domestication of dogs. By breeding dogs for specific tasks humans are acting as external forces shaping how dogs have evolved. But due to the inner formative forces dogs will always be recognisable as dogs and no external influences can transcend the limits set down by the inner formative forces.

    Dog breeding is a good example of external formative processes involved in intelligent creativity. Humans are responsible for the creation of poodles, terriers and the rest from the more general canine form. As creators humans did not know about the genes involved, nor did they need to.

    When Douglas Adams wrote ‘The Hitchhiker’s Guide…’ it wasn’t necessary for him to pick out every letter that made up the book and arrange them in the correct order. He formed the story in his mind and the letters automatically fell into place. That is the way that creative intelligence works.

    Creative intelligence works from the whole to the parts and not from the parts to the whole.

  25. In Steiner’s ‘Light Course’ given in 1919. He talks about mechanics in relation to the living and the non-living world. Mechanics,with its pointwise forces, is perfectly apt for the non-living world, but in order to get a better understanding of the living world peripheral forces must be taken into account. The effects of these pointwise forces cannot be measured in the way that pointwise forces are.

    From the first lecture:

    Speaking in general terms, we call the measure of a force thus centred and concentrated a “potential” or “potential force”. In studying these effects of Nature we then have to trace the potentials of the centric forces, — so we may formulate it. We look for centres which we then investigate as sources of potential forces.

    Such, in effect, is the line taken by that school of Science which is at pains to express everything in mechanical terms. It looks for centric forces and their potentials. In this respect our need will be to take one essential step — out into actual Nature — whereby we shall grow fully conscious of the fact: You cannot possibly understand any phenomenon in which Life plays a part if you restrict yourself to this method, looking only for the potentials of centric forces. Say you were studying the play of forces in an animal or vegetable embryo or germ-cell; with this method you would never find your way. No doubt it seems an ultimate ideal to the Science of today, to understand even organic phenomena in terms of potentials, of centric forces of some kind. It will be the dawn of a new world-conception in this realm when it is recognized that the thing cannot be done in this way, Phenomena in which Life is working can never be understood in terms of centric forces. Why, in effect, — why not? Diagrammatically, let us here imagine that we are setting out to study transient, living phenomena of Nature in terms of Physics. We look for centres, — to study the potential effects that may go out from such centres. Suppose we find the effect. If I now calculate the potentials, say for the three points a, b and c, I find that a will work thus and thus on A, B and C, or c on A’, B’ and C’; and so on. I should thus get a notion of how the integral effects will be, in a certain sphere, subject to the potentials of such and such centric forces. Yet in this way I could never explain any process involving Life. In effect, the forces that are essential to a living thing have no potential; they are not centric forces. If at a given point d you tried to trace the physical effects due to the influences of a, b and c, you would indeed be referring to the effects to centric forces, and you could do so. But if you want to study the effects of Life you can never do this. For these effects, there are no centres such as a or b or c. Here you will only take the right direction with your thinking when you speak thus: Say that at d there is something alive. I look for the forces to which the life is subject. I shall not find them in a, nor in b, nor in c, nor when I go still farther out. I only find them when as it were I go to the very ends of the world — and, what is more, to the entire circumference at once. Taking my start from d, I should have to go to the outermost ends of the Universe and imagine forces to the working inward from the spherical circumference from all sides, forces which in their interplay unite in d. It is the very opposite of the centric forces with their potentials. How to calculate a potential for what works inward from all sides, from the infinitudes of space? In the attempt, I should have to dismember the forces; one total force would have to be divided into ever smaller portions. Then I should get nearer and nearer the edge of the World: — the force would be completely sundered, and so would all my calculation. Here in effect it is not centric forces; it is cosmic, universal forces that are at work. Here, calculation ceases.

    Once more, you have the leap — the leap, this time, from that in Nature which is not alive to that which is. In the investigation of Nature we shall only find our way aright if we know what the leap is from Kinematics to Mechanics, and again what the leap is from external, inorganic Nature into those realms that are no longer accessible to calculation, — where every attempted calculation breaks asunder and every potential is dissolved away. This second leap will take us from external inorganic Nature into living Nature, and we must realize that calculation ceases where we want to understand what is alive.

    Now in this explanation I have been neatly dividing all that refers to potentials and centric forces and on the other hand all that leads out into the cosmic forces. Yet in the Nature that surrounds us they are not thus apart. You may put the question: Where can I find an object where only centric forces work with their potentials, and on the other hand where is the realm where cosmic forces work, which do not let you calculate potentials? An answer can indeed be given, and it is such as to reveal the very great importance of what is here involved. For we may truly say: All that Man makes by way of machines — all that is pieced together by Man from elements supplied by Nature — herein we find the purely centric forces working, working according to their potentials. What is existing in Nature outside us on the other hand — even in inorganic Nature — can never be referred exclusively to centric forces. In Nature there is no such thing; it never works completely in that way: Save in the things made artificially by Man, the workings of centric forces and cosmic are always flowing together in their effects. In the whole realm of so-called Nature there is nothing in the proper sense un-living. The one exception is what Man makes artificially; man-made machines and mechanical devices.

    The creative, living peripheral forces are integral to all living beings. In the case of machines they have quasi-living forces within them but the creativity is external to them. It comes from the minds of their human inventors.

    I’ve provided just one portion of Steiner’s lecture. A better understanding would require a full reading, but I know for many here even reading the excerpt is too much to ask. But it is there if anyone does want to read it.

Leave a Reply