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. 2011 Jul;4(4):469-70.
doi: 10.4161/cib.15547. Epub 2011 Jul 1.

Emergence or self-organization?: Look to the soil population

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Emergence or self-organization?: Look to the soil population

Tom Addiscott. Commun Integr Biol. 2011 Jul.

Abstract

EMERGENCE IS NOT WELL DEFINED, BUT ALL EMERGENT SYSTEMS HAVE THE FOLLOWING CHARACTERISTICS: the whole is more than the sum of the parts, they show bottom-up rather top-down organization and, if biological, they involve chemical signaling. Self-organization can be understood in terms of the second and third stages of thermodynamics enabling these stages used as analogs of ecosystem functioning. The second stage system was suggested earlier to provide a useful analog of the behavior of natural and agricultural ecosystems subjected to perturbations, but for this it needs the capacity for self-organization. Considering the hierarchy of the ecosystem suggests that this self-organization is provided by the third stage, whose entropy maximization acts as an analog of that of the soil population when it releases small molecules from much larger molecules in dead plant matter. This it does as vigorously as conditions allow. Through this activity, the soil population confers self-organization at both the ecosystem and the global level. The soil population has been seen as both emergent and self-organizing, supporting the suggestion that the two concepts are are so closely linked as to be virtually interchangeable. If this idea is correct one of the characteristics of a biological emergent system seems to be the ability to confer self-organization on an ecosystem or other entity which may be larger than itself. The beehive and the termite colony are emergent systems which share this ability.

Keywords: beehive; bottom-up organization; chemical signaling; conferment of self-organization; ecosystems; entropy maximization; non-equilibrium thermodynamics; slime mold; termite colony; whole more than sum of parts.

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Comment on

  • Addiscott TM. Entropy, non-linearity and hierarchy in ecosystems. Geoderma. 2010;160:57–63. doi: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2009.11.029.

References

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    1. Addiscott TM. Soil mineralization: An emergent process? Geoderma. 2010;160:31–35.
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    1. Johnson S. Emergence: the Connected Lives of Ants, Brains Cities and Software. London: Penguin Books Ltd; 2001.

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