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2
Genotype, Phenotype, and Environment
the control of gene expression. The main challenge faced by an organism is a fluctu-
ating environment; the variety that the organism can bring to bear with its regulatory
networks must be at least as great as that of the variety of the environment in which
the organism seeks to survive (the principle of requisite variety 3). The regulation of a
single-celled microbe must be purely biochemical, but higher animals, starting with
the nematode worm C. elegans, have a nervous system and can respond in a more
sophisticated fashion. When the nervous system becomes as sophisticated as that
of man, the homeostatic response to, say, temperature fluctuations become enabled
by an apparatus of vast complexity, encompassing industries to extract and harness
fuels for heating and cooling, and to manufacture apparel, and vehicles for conveying
human beings to warmer or colder climes as desired.
The “environment” is often rather vaguely conceived as the surroundings from
which the organism is delineated as an autonomous entity within it. It is a source of
food, providing the energy needed to maintain order. But it is also a source, as well as
a sink, of information; the classical separation between microscales and macroscales
breaks down in nonconservative systems and there is a flow of information between
the scales. Random noise can thus be amplified up to macroscopic expression (Shaw
1981). It has been shown to be necessary for the formation of an ordered neural
network (Érdi and Barna 1984). This is the key to understanding why the information
content in the genes appears to be wholly inadequate to specify a three-dimensional
protein structure or neural connexions.
Problem. Estimate the amount of information needed to specify (a) the structure of a
protein, and (b) the neural connexions in the brain, and determine whether sufficient
information is available in the relevant repositories (i.e., the genome).
References
Ashby WR (1958) Requisite variety and its implications for the control of complex systems. Cyber-
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Bernal JD (1949) The physical basis of life. Proc Phys Soc A 62:537–558
Dupré J (2005) Are there genes? In: O’Hear A (ed) Royal institute of philosophy supplement, vol
56, pp 193–210
Érdi P, Barna Gy (1984) Self-organizing mechanism for the formation of ordered neural mappings.
Biol Cybern 51:93–101
Pirie NW (1937) The meaninglessness of the terms ‘Life’ and ‘Living’. In: Needham J, Green DR
(eds) Perspectives in biochemistry. Cambridge University Press, p 21
Polanyi M (1968) Life’s irreducible structure. Science 160:1308–1312
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112
3 Ashby (1958).