Anti-World
Member
"...The modern understanding is that there are indeed universal laws (arising from fundamental physics and chemistry) that govern growth and form in biological systems."
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-organization)
Though the theories behind self-organization are fascinating they do not justify calling themselves "self-organizing" at the basis. Every single organism, object, chemical reaction, etc, as I read it, maintains that it needs certain laws or situations to govern them. It is all guided into place. Simply because an outside source is not needed to spur the reaction does not mean that the reaction or creation is not run by a guiding force. "Self-organizing" seems to me to be very misleading.
Perhaps I don't fully understand the concept and I will continue to read up on the subject but, at the moment, it seems to me that self-organization is true in that it doesn't take any *outside* forces to allow it to exist. However, they *do* need *internal* forces to exist.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-organization)
Though the theories behind self-organization are fascinating they do not justify calling themselves "self-organizing" at the basis. Every single organism, object, chemical reaction, etc, as I read it, maintains that it needs certain laws or situations to govern them. It is all guided into place. Simply because an outside source is not needed to spur the reaction does not mean that the reaction or creation is not run by a guiding force. "Self-organizing" seems to me to be very misleading.
Perhaps I don't fully understand the concept and I will continue to read up on the subject but, at the moment, it seems to me that self-organization is true in that it doesn't take any *outside* forces to allow it to exist. However, they *do* need *internal* forces to exist.