Codes across (life)sciences.

Journal: Bio Systems
Published Date:

Abstract

The concept of "code" connotes different meanings, intentions, and formalizations. From mathematics and computer sciences to psychology and culture, the term becomes less formal, more diverse, and sometimes appears ambiguous. In biology a growing number of codes ignite a debate about their role in evolution, biocomplexity, and agency, to name just a few. Here, a transdisciplinary group of code scientists attempts to capture the big picture of code research across their fields of interest. In this cross-sectional overview commonalities emerge that may pave the way towards a unified theory of life-based-on-codes. Codes underly cellular processes, perception, cognition, and communication. From ecosystems to human language, codes influence how individuals behave in groups, memorize, learn, and take part in cultural practices. Emotions like aggression, fear, anger, frustration, are important motivators of behaviour modulating mutual communication and sculpting individual experience. The inheritance of experience in form of innate release mechanisms, stereotyped behaviour, or archetypes may have phylogenetic and ontogenetic roots that rely on codes and impact our conscious decision making. Unconsciously, even our dreams draw on codes. In the future, conflation of different coding systems, e.g., from synthetic biology and generative artificial intelligence, will merge biological codes with machine logic and computer language to promote next-level transhumanism. Codes emerge as a currency converter between systems of life and between different scientific disciplines.

Authors

  • Robert Prinz
    Rechenkraft.net e.V., Marburg, Germany. Electronic address: rp@rechenkraft.net.
  • Philipp Bucher
    Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research (ISREC), School of Life Sciences, EPFL, Station 15, Lausanne, CH-1015, Switzerland. philipp.bucher@epfl.ch.
  • Ádám Kun
    Department of Plant Systematics, Ecology and Theoretical Biology, Eötvös University, Budapest, Hungary; Parmenides Center for the Conceptual Foundations of Science, Parmenides Foundation, Pöcking, Germany.
  • Omar Paredes
    IVF 2.0 Ltd, London, UK; Biodigital Innovation Lab, Translational Bioengineering Department, CUCEI, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico.
  • Anna Aragno
    National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis (NAAP), New York, USA.
  • Candice Shelby
    University of Colorado Denver, Denver, USA.
  • Markus Gumbel
    Center for Algorithmic and Mathematical Methods in Medicine, Biology, and Biotechnology, Technical University of Applied Sciences Mannheim, Germany.
  • Elena Fimmel
    Center for Algorithmic and Mathematical Methods in Medicine, Biology, and Biotechnology, Technical University of Applied Sciences Mannheim, Germany.
  • Lutz Strüngmann
    Center for Algorithmic and Mathematical Methods in Medicine, Biology, and Biotechnology, Technical University of Applied Sciences Mannheim, Germany.