[quote name='taby' timestamp='1341979635' post='4957884']
Surely you're not going to accuse me of saying that smoke and fire are alive. LOL.
Smoke might not fit but a fire isn't a million miles away from life.
Consider;
Life consumes resources, replicates and spreads and produces waste.
A fire consumes resources, it replicates and spreads as it consumes them and produces waste.
The properties of a fire are not unlike those of a bacterium, all be it on a simpler scale and yet bacteria are, last I checked, considered 'alive'.
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While it's true that there are convection cells in a flame, I am thinking more in terms of wood on fire. It's wood that's "eating" the oxygen and photons, and it's wood's nice neat low entropy processes that are being ripped apart by photons of relatively high energy flying every which direction. When I think of a live plant cell on fire, I think of a nice, ordered process where energy flows mostly along a few well defined paths being converted into a disordered mess.
Thinking of this particular process (wood on fire) got me to thinking that:
1) Processes generate heat, and at least some of that heat that cannot be used again for work, otherwise there would be perpetual motion machines.
2) Heat relies on photons.
3) Photons cause mutation.
4) High temperature processes overtake low temperature processes, otherwise heat would spontaneously flow from cold regions to hot regions.
... which leads me to think:
Poor construction may also be perfect construction is this case. We're ideally designed to be dependent on the environment we must create. We're smart enough to find a way to consume everything around us, but lack the ability to control our consumption. We even take pride in it individually.
I guess that's kind of a depressing thought thou, so you could look at humanity as more of a balance to life. ..bit of a Taoist approach I guess.
5) Heat-generating processes are naturally (self-)mutating, and (self-)improving. It's really no shock that life (self-sustaining/self-replicating heat transfer / entropy generators) emerged, since it's just an application of 1-4. It's really no shock that life went from single-cell bacteria (nibbling at the environment, generating a little heat transfer and a little entropy) to giant cow-eating humans (devouring the environment, generating a whole lot of heat transfer and entropy, detonating nuclear bombs, etc). It's also no shock that humans generate a lot of entropy through thought rather than through brute force. If we kept on going with nuclear bombs, it sure would generate a lot of entropy yeah, but it could annihilate humanity, and that's slightly counterproductive when it comes to sustaining good little heat engines.
Unfortunately, none of this leads me to simple explanations for death drive, Hamilton's rule -- that "thing" that leads us into an "undead" state, "paralyzed", and
perfectly "altruistic" in the most extreme cases where the life drive simply does not compensate.