>  From: Hans-Cees Speel <hanss@zondisk.sepa.tudelft.nl>
>  Organization: TU Delft
>  To: Bruce Edmonds pcp <b.edmonds@mmu.ac.uk>
>  Date: Mon, 28 Oct 1996 11:28:24 +0000
>  Subject: Re: "Re: "rosen and life itself.""
>  Reply-to: hanss@sepa.tudelft.nl
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>
>   I
>  > >  understand that if there is no 1:1 relation between parts and
>  > >  functions, this is thus not analytic [am I right?]. But what does
>  > >  this have to do with synthetic? You can't just multiply
>  > >  structures, can you? How should I interpreted this?
>  >
>  > Note: in my answer to this I let the following shorthand exist... a,
>  > b refer to the protein subunits, and 1, 2, 3, refer to the substrate
>  > and the two cofactors respectively.
>  >
>
>  > >  > The practical result is in the relation of functional
>  > >  > components to materia
>  >    l
>  > >  > parts.  A functional component (such as metabolism, repair,
>  > >  > replication in M-R systems)  HAS NO 1:1 mapping to the material
>  > >  > parts (biochemistry, anatomy).  It depends on them but can not
>  > >  > be preserved if certain ORGANIZATION is destroyed.
>
>  > >   If this were possible, analytic models
>  > >  > would be equivalent to synthetic models and we'd be talking
>  > >  > about a machine
>
>  > >  > Further, all synthetic models are analytic models.
>
>  > >  > There are analytic models which are not systhetic models.
>
>  > >  this is what I do not understand, apparently this is the case
>  > >  with non-machine models.
>
>
>  Let me see if I understand now. An analytic model is when I can see a
>  function and describe it. Some analytic models are also synthetic,
>  meaning that i can find a structure for every function 1:1. If this
>  is so, I am dealing with a machine.
>  If this is not the case, i am dealing with something beyond the
>  machine metaphor, and that could be an organism.
>
>  Am I right?
>
>  Hans-Cees
>
That sounds right to me....
Don Mikulecky