Robert Rosen wrote extensively about many scientific subjects, with a research stream that always circled back to the essential question of 'What is life?' Below you can access most of his published work, as well as some unpublished notes, including the primary ideas that led to the development of Life Itself I: Epistemology, and its intended sequel, Life Itself II: Ontology.
0
0
Reset the year slider filter to display undated documents:
Filtering by:
Tag

Catastrophe theory

Catastrophe theory is still in its infancy as a scientific concept, offering preliminary suggestions rather than a fully developed theory, and its true impact will depend on careful interpretation of its mathematical foundations in relation to empirical data

Topics:

Science
Academia
Dated
Commentary
1977

Causal Structures in Brains and Machines

Topics:

Consciousness
Brain
Function
Machines
Causality
Undated
Article draft
Undated

Causal structures in brains and machines

Maximally constrained mechanical systems can mimic the properties of organisms and machines, allowing for limitless behavioral plasticity through programming, despite inherent ambiguities in the concept of "machine" and the complexities of simulation relations

Topics:

Machines
Programming
Simulation
Causal
Dated
Article
1986

Cells and senescence

This article explores the relationship between cellular senescence and the aging of multicellular organisms by addressing whether individual cells undergo senescence and how this process contributes to overall organism aging

Topics:

Senescence
Cells
Organisms
Dated
Article
1978

Chemistry and Epitopes 23APR1993

Topics:

Gravitation
Inertia
Neurons
Chemistry
Dated
Typed notes
1993
No results yet, but the collection is still growing ;)
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.