English

Biological Hypercomputation: A Concept is Introduced

Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems 2012-10-18 v1

Abstract

This paper discusses the meaning and scope of biological hypercomputation (BH). The framework here is computational, and from the outset it should be clear that life is not a standard Turing Machine. Living systems hypercompute, but the distinction is made between classical and non-classical hypercomputation. We argue that living processes are non-classical hypercomputation. Yet, BH entails new computational models, for it does not correspond, any longer, to the Turing Machine model of computation. Hence, we introduce BH having a twofold scope, thus: on the one hand, it implies new computational models, while on the other hand we aim at understanding life not by what it is, but rather by what it does. From a computational point of view, life hypercomputes. At the end we sketch out the possibilities, stances and reach of BH. The aim of BH is basically help understanding life from a computational standpoint.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1210.4819,
  title  = {Biological Hypercomputation: A Concept is Introduced},
  author = {Carlos Eduardo Maldonado and Nelson Alfonso Gomez-Cruz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1210.4819},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

12 pages, 2 figures, Paper Accpeted at 2nd International Conference on Complex Sciences: Theory and Applications (Complex 2012), Santa fe, New Mexico, U.S.A., Dec. 5-7, 2012

R2 v1 2026-06-21T22:23:28.615Z