lansbergen
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
But like your analogy the system is not working properly because things are in the wrong place when they are needed.
Probably
But like your analogy the system is not working properly because things are in the wrong place when they are needed.
Luckily it wasn’t in person or I think my discomfort might have been obvious. But yes a cuppa is a British panacea.You're presumably British, the correct thing to say is "Would you like a cup of tea?". It's our answer to everything.
It's a terrible analogy. Electronic hardware is fixed, immutable and designed top-down for a specific purpose. Biological "hardware" changes itself constantly, it's literally how it creates the "software". It isn't just philosophically poor, it's technologically illiterate.I have never found the computer software-hardware metaphor useful for describing and understanding biological systems ('wetware').
Very misleading metaphor that should not be used.
We is just jumped up little spreadsheets under the illusion we are in charge, an illusion we are allowed to maintain most of the time because most of the time it doesn't matter.
Good point.That means that you cannot find anything apparently wrong with these cells - but they screw up the system by sending out inappropriate signals.
Stone, J., Hallett, M., Carson, A., Bergen, D., & Shakir, R. (2014). Functional disorders in the Neurology section of ICD-11: A landmark opportunity. Neurology, 83(24), 2299–2301. doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000001063
had recommended: "We have proposed a category within the Neurologic section in which all of the functional disorders involving motor and sensory function can be listed and coded (including nonepileptic attacks) (table). We suggest that, like other conditions shared between neurologists and psychiatrists, such as Tourette syndrome and dementia, psychiatry retains a code for functional disorders, preferably matching that found in neurology."
Is DNA hardware or firmware using the definitions you are using? Coz it could easily be seen as both.
I have never found the computer software-hardware metaphor useful for describing and understanding biological systems ('wetware').
Very misleading metaphor that should not be used.