Where were you when you realized that he first cell never died, and is still alive in everyone of us?
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while that is certain, is also still too linear
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nature is more like a distributed process. was doubtlessly plenty of failed "cells" before the main line that lead to us, and even then is was more of like a collective fade in, then a big bang. you think "Abiogenesis" is rare, the trend of evidence points the other way.
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comparing to cosmology in that example was fun, because is also how everyone is wrong about that too. existence didn't start from a point mass, but rather faded in everywhere out of quantum ocean/reality trillions of years ago. (think of spacetime as surface tension).
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anyways, as for evolution and
#TeamUnicellular world history; I think programming languages is a useful metaphor construct. takes a really long time to develop the machine assembler code, after which higher level languages and modular programming enables things to go much faster1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
you also talked about DNA "mutating from first cell" and again suggesting 2 linear a view of climb into increased complexity. infinity games on surface of the quantum ocean, nature, evolutionary intelligence, is more like soup that also shared horizontallyhttps://med.stanford.edu/news/all-news/2015/11/ancient-viral-molecules-essential-for-human-development.html …
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at least one of us is very confused
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