Papers Published
- Rosenberg, A, Defending information-free genocentrism.,
History and philosophy of the life sciences, vol. 27 no. 3-4
(January, 2005),
pp. 345-359.
(last updated on 2024/04/19)
Abstract: Genocentrism, the thesis that the genes play a special role in the causation of development is often rejected in favor of a 'causal democracy thesis' to the effect that all causally necessary conditions for development are equal. Genocentrists argue that genes play a distinct causal role owing to their informational content and that this content enables them to program the embryo. I show that the special causal role of the genome hinges not on its informational status--it has none, or at least no more than computer programs have independent of our interpretations of them--but on its power literally to program the embryo, a power nicely illustrated in the use of polynucleotide sequences to compute solutions to NP hard problems in mathematics.
|