Therefore what? Have you had a look at tapeworm life cycles and reproduction? Get back to me when you discover any form of tapeworm reproduction that doesn't involve egg cells.romansh wrote: ↑Aug 05, 2024 3:36 pmTapeworm anyone. Tapeworms can't reproduce without a host, therefore...CharlieM wrote: ↑Aug 03, 2024 1:43 pm From here: https://www.khanacademy.org/science/bio ... to-virusesSo the minimum requirement for reproduction is a cell. It doesn't matter how you slice up the energy allocation or how smart you think virus strategy is. The fact of the matter is that cells are an essential part of the process. Take the cell away and tell me what happens.Because they can't reproduce by themselves (without a host), viruses are not considered living. Nor do viruses have cells: they're very small, much smaller than the cells of living things, and are basically just packages of nucleic acid and protein.
Some notable remarks in that interview, to be sure. For instance:romansh wrote: ↑Aug 05, 2024 3:36 pm Trying to describe life is something exobiologists have a lot of fun with.
https://www.space.com/22210-life-defini ... rview.html
Self-replication in the case of viruses necessarily involves the whole system. This system includes the host cell as a minimum requirement."Darwinian evolution" has an associated property list: You can’t have Darwinian evolution without self-replication or reproduction. You can’t have it without mutability, heritability, and variation of form and function. And metabolism is in there too. You can’t have Darwinian evolution without, at some level, a flux of higher-energy starting materials to lower-energy products that drive the processes of replication and whatever is necessary to support replication...
A single individual might seem to be capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution, but may in fact be dead, or a fossil remnant, or about to die, or unable to find a mate. So it is the system that is said to be capable, not the individual.
They even state as much in your link, so thanks for that:
I couldn't have put it better myself.The viral genome only evolves in the context of the host cell...Something within the system, within the collective system, must provide all of the information necessary to bring about Darwinian evolution... The virus alone can’t achieve this, but the virus plus the host cell can.
My only incredulity is in the fact that you would link to an interview that confirms my point.romansh wrote: ↑Aug 05, 2024 3:36 pm Your whole argument boils down to a logical fallacy:
argument from incredulity