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 Below you can access most of his published work, as well as some unpublished notes, including the primary ideas that led to the development of Life Itself I: Epistemology, and its intended sequel, Life Itself II: Ontology.
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Closer to the Bone 23AUG1986

Topics:

Turing
Machines
Simulation
Dated
Typed notes
1986

Comment on Leah's recognizer

Topics:

Senescence
Thermodynamics
Undated
Typed notes
Undated

Commentary on Webster and Goodwin's ‘The origin of species- a structuralist approach’

Webster and Goodwin argue that biological theory should be generative and based on a 'system of transformations,' providing a clear historical and philosophical context for current biological thought

Topics:

Biological Systems
Quantum
Taxonomy
Dated
Commentary
1982

Comments on 'A unified theory of biology and physics'

Goldman's paper proposes a novel analogy between microscopic physics and biological organisms, challenging traditional views and prompting reflection on the depth and utility of such analogies in scientific understanding

Topics:

Biology
Physics
Organisms
Analogy
Quantum
Dated
Commentary
1980

Comments on the validity of the simultaneous use of the conservation of edge equations in the model proposed by Goel et al (1970)

Antonelli, Rogers, and Willard (1973) identified significant mathematical errors in Goel et al.'s (1970) model for cell aggregation, but we contend that these errors do not undermine the model's conclusions for any finite number of cell types

Topics:

Cells
Cell Sorting
Modelling
Dated
Commentary
1974
No results yet, but the collection is still growing ;)
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