We reflect on the computational aspects that are embedded in life at the molecular and cellular level, where life machinery can be understood as a massively distributed system whose macroscopic behaviour is an emerging property of the interaction of its components. Such a relatively new perspective, clearly pursued by systems biology, is contributing to the view that biology is, in several respects, a quantitative science. The recent developments in biotechnology and synthetic biology, noticeably, are pushing the computational interpretation of biology even further, envisaging the possibility of a programmable biology. Several in-silico, in-vitro and in-vivo results make such a possibility a very concrete one. The long-term implications of such an “extended” idea of programmable living hardware, as well as the applications that we intend to develop on those “computers”, pose fundamental questions. © IFIP International Federation for Information Processing 2016.

From ‘cells as computation' to ‘cells as apps'

Bracciali A
;
2016-01-01

Abstract

We reflect on the computational aspects that are embedded in life at the molecular and cellular level, where life machinery can be understood as a massively distributed system whose macroscopic behaviour is an emerging property of the interaction of its components. Such a relatively new perspective, clearly pursued by systems biology, is contributing to the view that biology is, in several respects, a quantitative science. The recent developments in biotechnology and synthetic biology, noticeably, are pushing the computational interpretation of biology even further, envisaging the possibility of a programmable biology. Several in-silico, in-vitro and in-vivo results make such a possibility a very concrete one. The long-term implications of such an “extended” idea of programmable living hardware, as well as the applications that we intend to develop on those “computers”, pose fundamental questions. © IFIP International Federation for Information Processing 2016.
2016
Post-conference proceedings of 3rd International Conference on the History and Philosophy of Computing (HaPoC 2015). Third International Conference, HaPoC
Springer
487
116
128
978-3-319-47285-0
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-319-47286-7
Bracciali A; Cataldo E; Damiano L; Felicioli C; Marangoni P; Stano P
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2071794
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