Autopoiesis/Definition: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Anthony.Sebastian (redefining autopoiesis) |
imported>Anthony.Sebastian (addition refinements of defn) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
<!-- "Write the definition here (maximum one sentence of 100 characters, ignoring formatting characters). Don't include the term defined in the definition itself, and start the text with a capital letter. | <!-- "Write the definition here (maximum one sentence of 100 characters, ignoring formatting characters). Don't include the term defined in the definition itself, and start the text with a capital letter. | ||
Further details of how a definition should look like are given at [[CZ:Definitions#Format of the definition itself]]. (Delete this note, including the enclosing quotation marks, after reading.)" --> | Further details of how a definition should look like are given at [[CZ:Definitions#Format of the definition itself]]. (Delete this note, including the enclosing quotation marks, after reading.)" --> | ||
The concept of a living system as autonomously self-organizing within its boundary, generating and continually regenerating its own components, thereby maintaining the molecular and supramolecular networks that | The concept of a living system as autonomously self-organizing within its physical boundary, generating and continually regenerating its own components, thereby maintaining the molecular and supramolecular hierarchy of interacting networks that self-organize and self-perpetuate the system. |
Latest revision as of 22:17, 22 February 2010
The concept of a living system as autonomously self-organizing within its physical boundary, generating and continually regenerating its own components, thereby maintaining the molecular and supramolecular hierarchy of interacting networks that self-organize and self-perpetuate the system.