The Fabric of Reality David Deutch
particular string of ten molecules, in the special niche consisting of the rest of
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The Fabric of Reality
particular string of ten molecules, in the special niche consisting of the rest of the gene and its niche, is a replicator. It embodies a small but significant amount of knowledge. Now suppose, for the sake of argument, that we can find a junk-DNA (non-gene) segment in the bear’s DNA which also has the sequence TCGTCGTTTC. Nevertheless this sequence is not; worth calling a replicator, because it contributes almost nothing to its replication, and it embodies no knowledge. It is a random sequence. So here we have two physical objects, both segments of the same DNA chain, one of which embodies knowledge and the other is a random sequence. But they are physically identical. How can knowledge be a fundamental physical quantity, if one object has it while a physically identical object does not? It can, because these two segments are not really identical. They only look identical when viewed from some universes, such as ours. Let us look at them again, as they appear in other universes. We cannot directly observe other universes, so we must use theory. We know that DNA in living organisms is naturally subject to random variations — mutations — in the sequence of A, C, G and T molecules. According to the theory of evolution, the adaptations in genes, and therefore the genes’ very existence, depend on such mutations having occurred. Because of mutations, populations of any gene contain a degree of variation, and individuals carrying genes with higher degrees of adaptation tend to have more offspring than other individuals. Most variations in a gene make it unable to cause its replication, because the altered sequence no longer instructs the cell to manufacture anything useful. Others merely make replication less likely (that is, they narrow the gene’s niche). But some may happen to embody new instructions that make replication more likely. Thus natural selection occurs. With each generation of variation and replication the degree of adaptation of the surviving genes tends to increase. Now, a random mutation, caused for instance by a cosmic-ray strike, causes variation not only within the population of the organism in one universe, but between universes as well. A cosmic ‘ray’ is a high-energy sub-atomic Download 1.42 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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