Consul wrote: ↑March 18th, 2022, 4:04 pm
Sy Borg wrote: ↑March 18th, 2022, 3:47 pm
Machines did not exist before humans created them.
One meaning of "machine" is "an intricate natural system or organism, such as the human body" (American Heritage), "a living organism or one of its functional systems" (Merriam-Webster). In the broadest sense, a machine is "a structure of any kind, material or immaterial; a fabric, an erection" (OED).
Sure. The geology that from which biology emerged was vastly more akin to biology than the machines we so often mistakenly compare with life.
Life and machines are opposites, not analogues. Life is driven from within, machines from without. Life is the event while machines are an addendum to that event. When life is referred to as "biological machines", morphology is elevated above being. Life-as-machine is a superficial observation.
The more distant we are from phenomena, the further up our ivory towers we are, looking down upon creation, the more it will resemble a machine. With enough distance,
everything seems to be a machine, including human societies. With enough nearness, though, nothing does.