Literature DB >> 18365164

Biosemiotics: a new understanding of life.

Marcello Barbieri1.   

Abstract

Biosemiotics is the idea that life is based on semiosis, i.e., on signs and codes. This idea has been strongly suggested by the discovery of the genetic code, but so far it has made little impact in the scientific world and is largely regarded as a philosophy rather than a science. The main reason for this is that modern biology assumes that signs and meanings do not exist at the molecular level, and that the genetic code was not followed by any other organic code for almost four billion years, which implies that it was an utterly isolated exception in the history of life. These ideas have effectively ruled out the existence of semiosis in the organic world, and yet there are experimental facts against all of them. If we look at the evidence of life without the preconditions of the present paradigm, we discover that semiosis is there, in every single cell, and that it has been there since the very beginning. This is what biosemiotics is really about. It is not a philosophy. It is a new scientific paradigm that is rigorously based on experimental facts. Biosemiotics claims that the genetic code (1) is a real code and (2) has been the first of a long series of organic codes that have shaped the history of life on our planet. The reality of the genetic code and the existence of other organic codes imply that life is based on two fundamental processes--copying and coding--and this in turn implies that evolution took place by two distinct mechanisms, i.e., by natural selection (based on copying) and by natural conventions (based on coding). It also implies that the copying of genes works on individual molecules, whereas the coding of proteins operates on collections of molecules, which means that different mechanisms of evolution exist at different levels of organization. This review intends to underline the scientific nature of biosemiotics, and to this purpose, it aims to prove (1) that the cell is a real semiotic system, (2) that the genetic code is a real code, (3) that evolution took place by natural selection and by natural conventions, and (4) that it was natural conventions, i.e., organic codes, that gave origin to the great novelties of macroevolution. Biological semiosis, in other words, is a scientific reality because the codes of life are experimental realities. The time has come, therefore, to acknowledge this fact of life, even if that means abandoning the present theoretical framework in favor of a more general one where biology and semiotics finally come together and become biosemiotics.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18365164     DOI: 10.1007/s00114-008-0368-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Naturwissenschaften        ISSN: 0028-1042


  36 in total

Review 1.  Elucidating sequence codes: three codes for evolution.

Authors:  E N Trifonov
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  1999-05-18       Impact factor: 5.691

Review 2.  Biological information transfer beyond the genetic code: the sugar code.

Authors:  H J Gabius
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2000-03

3.  The language of covalent histone modifications.

Authors:  B D Strahl; C D Allis
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2000-01-06       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 4.  Biology without information.

Authors:  Giovanni Boniolo
Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 1.205

5.  Biology with information and meaning.

Authors:  Marcello Barbieri
Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 1.205

6.  The definitions of information and meaning two possible boundaries between physics and biology.

Authors:  Marcello Barbieri
Journal:  Riv Biol       Date:  2004 Jan-Apr

Review 7.  Cadherins in the developing central nervous system: an adhesive code for segmental and functional subdivisions.

Authors:  C Redies; M Takeichi
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  1996-12-15       Impact factor: 3.582

8.  Interfering contexts of regulatory sequence elements.

Authors:  E N Trifonov
Journal:  Comput Appl Biosci       Date:  1996-10

9.  The RNA code and protein synthesis.

Authors:  M Nirenberg; T Caskey; R Marshall; R Brimacombe; D Kellogg; B Doctor; D Hatfield; J Levin; F Rottman; S Pestka; M Wilcox; F Anderson
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol       Date:  1966

10.  Distinct p53 acetylation cassettes differentially influence gene-expression patterns and cell fate.

Authors:  Chad D Knights; Jason Catania; Simone Di Giovanni; Selen Muratoglu; Ricardo Perez; Amber Swartzbeck; Andrew A Quong; Xiaojing Zhang; Terry Beerman; Richard G Pestell; Maria Laura Avantaggiati
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  2006-05-22       Impact factor: 10.539

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  15 in total

1.  Protosemiosis: agency with reduced representation capacity.

Authors:  Alexei A Sharov; Tommi Vehkavaara
Journal:  Biosemiotics       Date:  2015-04-01       Impact factor: 0.711

2.  Evolutionary biosemiotics and multilevel construction networks.

Authors:  Alexei A Sharov
Journal:  Biosemiotics       Date:  2016-08-16       Impact factor: 0.711

3.  Composite Agency: Semiotics of Modularity and Guiding Interactions.

Authors:  Alexei A Sharov
Journal:  Biosemiotics       Date:  2017-07-27       Impact factor: 0.711

4.  Evolution of natural agents: preservation, advance, and emergence of functional information.

Authors:  Alexei A Sharov
Journal:  Biosemiotics       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 0.711

5.  Biphasic patterns of diversification and the emergence of modules.

Authors:  Jay Mittenthal; Derek Caetano-Anollés; Gustavo Caetano-Anollés
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2012-08-07       Impact factor: 4.599

6.  A general framework of persistence strategies for biological systems helps explain domains of life.

Authors:  Liudmila S Yafremava; Monica Wielgos; Suravi Thomas; Arshan Nasir; Minglei Wang; Jay E Mittenthal; Gustavo Caetano-Anollés
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2013-02-25       Impact factor: 4.599

7.  Molecular codes in biological and chemical reaction networks.

Authors:  Dennis Görlich; Peter Dittrich
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-01-23       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 8.  The capabilities of chaos and complexity.

Authors:  David L Abel
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2009-01-09       Impact factor: 6.208

9.  The Natural Emergence of (Bio)Semiosic Phenomena.

Authors:  J H van Hateren
Journal:  Biosemiotics       Date:  2015-05-27       Impact factor: 0.711

10.  Virus is a Signal for the Host Cell.

Authors:  Ascensión Ariza-Mateos; Isabel Cacho; Jordi Gómez
Journal:  Biosemiotics       Date:  2015-07-17       Impact factor: 0.711

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