It seems to me that biology can not be completely derived from physics — Yuting Liu
because physical laws apply to both life and lifeless forms and draws no distinction between these forms. Thus, the biological distinction of life forms from lifeless forms can not be physical. — Yuting Liu
If a unified theory of physics derives biology, at some point in the derivation, it should say something like there is life in the universe, but it seems possible to construct hypothetical lifeless universes that physical laws all hold up. — Yuting Liu
Last I heard on that topic, admittedly the best part of a decade ago, it was a philosophically contested claim. Back then, there were some philosophers of science looking at how quantum chemistry might provide a reductive bridge between the concepts employed in chemistry and those employed in physics. I was not aware that the debate had been so clearly resolved, do you have a reference article I could read?and chemistry is clearly reducible to physics
chemistry is clearly reducible to physics — Pfhorrest
It seems to me that biology can not be completely derived from physics, because physical laws apply to both life and lifeless forms and draws no distinction between these forms. — Yuting Liu
Any set of propositions can either be 1) incomplete and coherent or 2) incoherent and complete. — h060tu
So Kurt Godel has already refuted the theory of everything. — h060tu
What about chemistry is supposedly not reducible in this way? — Pfhorrest
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