Wasn't that my point? Structural complexity depends on controlled death. And hydra are already complex enough for that to be a factor. — apokrisis
Again, it is an evolutionary story. If complex structure depends on controlled death, then control over that death will become increasingly a feature. — apokrisis
The point is that there is a colossal step between cell-suicide and programmed organismal death. — Akanthinos
I was talking about the death of possibilities, the termination of development - the positive step of making the soma disposable so as to make the germ-line evolvable.
If you want to make some more simplistic reading of what I wrote, I guess I can't stop you. — apokrisis
Bloody hell, how fucking otiose can someone be??? — Akanthinos
I was talking about the death of possibilities, the termination of development - the positive step of making the soma disposable so as to make the germ-line evolvable. — apokrisis
Organismal immortality does not prevent evolution. — Akanthinos
These are the claims that you made in your post, and they were incorrect, and as usual you tried to deflect by writing a barely-related envolee lyrique. — Akanthinos
The immortality of the germ-line had to be physically separated from the mortality of the stem-line to achieve even basic multicellular complexity. — apokrisis
What immortality? Germ-lines can become extinct like anything else. — Akanthinos
A year ago I saw this sci-fi movie (forgot the name) where they capture s star-fish like Martian life form whose cells are multi-functional e.g. the skin cells think, see, taste, smell, feel and multiply all at the same time. The cells are even able to contract like muscles. — TheMadFool
Do you think that's possible - ''Omnipotent'' cells capable of any possible bodlily function and still able to undego cell division? — TheMadFool
The functionality is a property of the higher level of organisation and so cannot inhere in the cell itself. — apokrisis
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