Helvetios
Heathen Sapiens
As promised, a thread stemming from a discussion in chat the other day between @MD, @lovesong, @SaintFrankenstein and possibly others.
I did some more reading and found out that, in fact, some scientists are reconsidering their approaches to cancer research and are beginning to treat tumours as organisms in various senses of the word. Tumours do have various characteristics in common with the definition of an organism, although they do not have the same lineage of things we would normally consider organisms. Will probably edit this later but here are a few of the resources I've been reading.
https://news.berkeley.edu/2011/07/26/are-cancers-newly-evolved-species/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2905377/
http://faculty.fmcc.suny.edu/mcdarby/Cancer-Evolution.htm
I did some more reading and found out that, in fact, some scientists are reconsidering their approaches to cancer research and are beginning to treat tumours as organisms in various senses of the word. Tumours do have various characteristics in common with the definition of an organism, although they do not have the same lineage of things we would normally consider organisms. Will probably edit this later but here are a few of the resources I've been reading.
https://news.berkeley.edu/2011/07/26/are-cancers-newly-evolved-species/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2905377/
http://faculty.fmcc.suny.edu/mcdarby/Cancer-Evolution.htm