07 March 2021

Machines XI (Life vs. Machine II)

"The moral universe is so closely linked to the physical universe that it is scarcely likely that they are not one and the same machine." (Denis Diderot, "Eléments de Physiologie", 1875)

"Thanks to the psycho-physical reversibility, we can materialize the act of creation. Undoubtedly, the inventive machine has not yet been created, but we can see its creation soon." (Stefan Odobleja, "Consonant Psychology", 1938)

"In any case there is an intense modern interest in machines that imitate life. The great difference between magic and the scientific imitation of life is that where the former is content to copy external appearance, the latter is concerned more with performance and behavior." (William G Walter," An imitation of life", 1950) 

"We are always looking for metaphors in which to express our ideas of life, for our language is inadequate for all its complexities. Life is a labyrinth.[...] Life is a machine.[...] Life is a laboratory.[...] It is but a metaphor. When we speak of ultimate things we can, maybe, speak only in metaphors. Life is a dance, a very elaborate and complex dance [...]." (Charles Singer, "A Short History of Scientific Ideas to 1900", 1959)

"The machine rules. Human life is rigorously controlled by it, dominated by the terribly precise will of mechanisms. These creatures of man are exacting. They are now reacting on their creators, making them like themselves. They want well-trained humans; they are gradually wiping out the differences between men, fitting them into their own orderly functioning, into the uniformity of their own regimes. They are thus shaping humanity for their own use, almost in their own image." (Paul A Valéry, "Fairy Tales for Computers", 1969)

"The environment makes up a huge, enormously complex living machine that forms a thin dynamic layer on the earth’s surface, and every human activity depends on the integrity and the proper functioning of this machine. Without the photosynthetic activity of green plants, there would be no oxygen for our engines, smelters, and furnaces, let alone support for human and animal life. Without the action of the plants, animals, and microorganisms that live in them, we could have no pure water in our lakes and rivers. Without the biological processes that have gone on in the soil for thousands of years, we could have neither food crops, oil, nor coal. This machine is our biological capital, the basic apparatus on which our total productivity depends. If we destroy it, our most advanced technology will become useless and any economic and political system that depends on it will founder. The environmental crisis is a signal of this approaching catastrophe." (Barry Commoner, "The Closing Circle: Nature, Man & Technology", 1971)

"In his emotional involvement with the machine, the engineer cannot help but feel at times that he has come face to face with a strange but potent form of life." (Samuel C Florman, "The Existential Pleasures of Engineering", 1976)

"Life, a watery, carbon-based macromolecular system, is reproducing autopoeisis. The autopoetic view of life is circular. Life is a metabolic machine which not only reproduces but fi ercely stores and uses information in order to resist breaking down." (Lynn Margulis & Dorion Sagan, "Microcosmos", 1986)

"On balance, the cartesian metaphor of organism as machine has proved to be a good idea. Ideas do not have to be correct in order to be good; its only necessary that, if they do fail, they do so in an interesting way." (Robert Rosen)

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