arXiv Open Access 2026

Biology and Physics

Stuart A. Newman Sahotra Sarkar
Lihat Sumber

Abstrak

This article frames the relation between biology and physics by characterizing the former as a subdiscipline rather than a special case of the latter. To do this, we posit biological physics as the science of living matter in contrast to classic biophysics, the study of organismal properties by physical techniques. At the scale of the individual cell, living matter is nonunitary, i.e., not composed of aggregated subunits, and has features (e.g., intracellular organizational arrangements and biomolecular condensates) that are unlike any materials of the nonliving world. In transiently or constitutively multicellular forms (social microorganisms, animals, plants), living matter sustains physical processes that are generic (shared with nonliving matter, e.g., subunit communication by molecular diffusion in cellular slime molds), biogeneric (analogous to nonliving matter but realized through cellular activities, e.g., subunit demixing in animal embryos) or nongeneric (pertaining to sui generis materials, e.g., budding of active solids in plants). This "forms of matter" perspective is philosophically situated in the dialectical materialism of Engels and Hessen and the multilevel physicalism of Neurath and the logical empiricists. We counterpose this view to informationism and to genetic and other hierarchically reductionist physical theories of biological systems and highlight open questions regarding incompletely characterized and enigmatic forms of living matter.

Penulis (2)

S

Stuart A. Newman

S

Sahotra Sarkar

Format Sitasi

Newman, S.A., Sarkar, S. (2026). Biology and Physics. https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.11234

Akses Cepat

Lihat di Sumber
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2026
Bahasa
en
Sumber Database
arXiv
Akses
Open Access ✓