Hi
Hmm, many good points everyone. I agree that everything is very complex, despite of how simple it may look, and that we do not know enough to say what is and what is not. I also believe that not everything can be proven by logic. I\'ll not go deeper into that now.
As for ajdaha\'s questions:
There are many ways of \'living forever\', if I\'ve understood you correctly, you mean \'not dying from aging\'.
\"Why reproduce, why not, instead, just live forever?\"
- The organism can still be hurt and die. This kind of life will ultimately be extinct after time, due to eg. natural catastrophes and other species, if it doesn\'t reproduce at all.
\"So, what did the a-sexually reproducing cells have that was better than an animal who lives forever?\"
- Many lifes. If the original organism is hurt and dies, it\'s children will live and reproduce further.
Hmm, let\'s assume that we have life that doesn\'t die of age and does reproduce (either sexually or a-sexually). The exponentially growing number of organisms would need ever growing amounts of food. I think this would collapse the ecosystem, break the circle of life, as there wouldn\'t be any/enough dead organisms to compose into nutrition for plants. No plants, no herbivores, no predators. I think that in the end, a death of one is needed to provide life for the many.
This kind of genetic property, aging, is interesting, as it does not further the success of the actual individual, rather that of the entire specie. Or all the life.
Just my thoughts. Thanks for reading
