DarkRange55
Enlightened
- Oct 15, 2023
- 1,798
I don't think there should really be any question on whether viruses are alive. They evolve through natural selection, they reproduce, they have parasites of their own, some of the larger ones even have their own metabolism.
I've seen two arguments against it – one, that they don't have cells , and second, that they don't have their own ribosomes to make proteins. In the first regard, I see no reason that cells are essential to being alive (I think that it is a biased position from people who happen to have cells_). In the second regard, Isaac Asimov settled it for me when he pointed out that a woodcutter who borrows an ax is still a woodcutter even though he doesn't have his own ax.
I've seen two arguments against it – one, that they don't have cells , and second, that they don't have their own ribosomes to make proteins. In the first regard, I see no reason that cells are essential to being alive (I think that it is a biased position from people who happen to have cells_). In the second regard, Isaac Asimov settled it for me when he pointed out that a woodcutter who borrows an ax is still a woodcutter even though he doesn't have his own ax.