A Diffuse Biosemiotic Model for
Cell-to-Tissue Computational Closure


Ron Cottam, Willy Ranson & Roger Vounckx

In press

BioSystems, 55, pp 159-171.

Abstract

            The adoption of diffuse rationality [1, 2] creates a practical bridge between biosemiotics [3, 4] and computation [5, 6, 7] in formulating local-to-global self-consistent criteria [8, 9] for cellular-to-tissue interfacing and for the emergence of life and consciousness [10, 11, 12]. Nature is always complex [13], the more so at biological membranic inter-scalar interfaces. We present an evolutionary model [14] of the relationship between autonomy [15] and dependence across scales, and describe the implications of its alternating complex-rational-complex nature [16, 17] for the computational process-closure, enclosure and exposure of cellular-to-tissue interfacing.


References

[1] Cottam R, Ranson W and Vounckx R. Diffuse Rationality in Complex Systems. InterJournal of Complex Systems Article, 235, 1998.

[2] Edwina Taborsky: private communication.

[3] Taborsky E. Architectonics of Semiosis (Semaphores and Signs), St Martins Press, 1998.

[4] Hoffmeyer J. Life: the Invention of Externalism. Acta Polytechnica Scandinavica: Emergence, Complexity, Hierarchy, Order, 187-196, Finnish Academy of Technology, Espoo, 1998.

[5] Langloh N, Cottam R, Vounckx R and Cornelis J. Towards Distributed Statistical Processing - AQuARIUM: a Query and Reflection Interaction Using MAGIC: Mathematical Algorithms Generating Interdependent Confidences. In Smith S D and Neale R F, eds, ESPRIT Basic Research Series, Optical Information Technology, 303-319, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1993.

[6] Cottam R, Ranson W and Vounckx R. Localisation and Nonlocality in Computation. In Holcombe M and Paton R, eds, Information Processing in Cells and Tissues, Plenum Press, New York, 1997.

[7] Cottam R, Ranson W and Vounckx R. Computability as an Evolutionary Context. In The Second German Workshop on Artificial Life, Dortmund, 1997.

[8] Matsuno K. Dynamics of Time and Information in Dynamic Time. BioSystems 46, 57-71, 1998.

[9] Matsuno K. Living Memory and the Internalist Stance. In Closure: Emergent Organizations and their Dynamics, Gent, 1999. To be published by the New York Academy of Sciences.

[10] Cottam R, Ranson W and Vounckx R. Emergence: Half a Quantum Jump? Acta Polytechnica Scandinavica: Emergence, Complexity, Hierarchy, Order, 12-19, Finnish Academy of Technology, Espoo, 1998.

[11] Cottam R, Ranson W & Vounckx R. Consciousness: the Precursor to Life? In The Third German Workshop on Artificial Life: Abstracting and Synthesizing the Principles of Living Systems, Verlag Harri Deutsch, Thun, 1998.

[12] Cottam R, Ranson W and Vounckx R. Life as its own Tool for Survival. To be presented at The Forty Third Meeting of the International Society for the System Sciences, Pacific Grove, CA, 1999.

[13] Mikulecky D. Robert Rosen: The Well Posed Question and Its Answer – Why Are Organisms Different From Machines? To be presented at The Forty Third Meeting of the International Society for the System Sciences, Pacific Grove, CA, 1999.

[14] Cottam R, Ranson W and Vounckx R. A Biologically Consistent Hierarchical Framework for Self-Referencing Survivalist Computation. Submitted to The Third International Conference on Computing Anticipatory Systems, Liège, 1999.

[15] Collier J D. Autonomy in Anticipatory Systems: Significance for Functionality, Intentionality and Meaning. In Dubois D M, ed, The Second International Conference on Computing Anticipatory Systems, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1999.

[16] Cottam R, Ranson W and Vounckx R. Partial Comprehension in a Quasi-Particulate Universe. In Einstein Meets Magritte, Brussels, 1995.

[17] Lemke J L. Opening Up Closure: Semiotics Across Scales. In Closure: Emergent Organizations and their Dynamics, Gent, 1999. To be published by the New York Academy of Sciences.

______________________________________________
______________________________________________