Sunday, March 02, 2003


One of the things that is perhaps most exciting about biological computers, or genetic computers, is that our present math only explains what we understand now. To understand the whole of the universe requires math and computation and thought that can evolve.

I forget whether or not I wrote about this before, but one of the hallmarks of life, or individuated beings, according to some scientists, is having a membrane of some sort, distinguishing that being from the outside world.

This morning, that, for me, will be the blue wrapper of my Sunday New York Times, and the pages there in. As my golgi apparatus sips coffee from a cup.

I don't even remember my cellular biology, and even back then, it was probably twenty years behind. Apparently, looking over my old high school yearbooks, and what people signed, I argued with Mr. Horstman frequently in class. And with other teachers.


9:58:34 AM