No, I’m not saying that. Yes, there is extra-genomic information. I’m sure that the increase in intelligence happens because more-complex creatures can extract more information from the environment.
Yes, you were saying “that” where “that” refers to “almost all of the information content of an organism resides in the amino-acid sequence of its domains”. And that statement means that, but for practical difficulties, the DNA suffices to tell you what you need to do to build the organism (though you left a caveat that you might still need a small amount of extra information, which I assumed to mean e.g. age).
If you mean something else by it, then you’re using the terms in a non-standard way.
This isn’t an issue of organisms being able to extract more information from the environment; irrespective of how much information it extracts from the environment, you still need lots of information in addition to the genome to make a copy—and this is a big part of why Jurassic Park hasn’t already happened.
(By the way, based on our previous exchanges, we seem to be looking at similar problems and could help each other: one big hole in my knowledge is that of organic chemistry and thus how existing self-replicators work at the chemical level.)
Yes, you were saying “that” where “that” refers to “almost all of the information content of an organism resides in the amino-acid sequence of its domains”.
I assume you mean you’ve edited your previous comment. I’d appreciate it if, when people edit their posts or comments, they indicate that they have done so, and ideally how, in the very same comment/post. That said, I don’t want to be so nitpicky as to discourage contributions.
“almost all of the information content of an organism resides in the amino-acid sequence of its domains” is an accurate statement. The uterine environment is involved with the creation of another organism, but it is not part of the information content of the organism, except in the sense that everything that happens to an organism is recorded in damages to that organism.
Yes, you were saying “that” where “that” refers to “almost all of the information content of an organism resides in the amino-acid sequence of its domains”. And that statement means that, but for practical difficulties, the DNA suffices to tell you what you need to do to build the organism (though you left a caveat that you might still need a small amount of extra information, which I assumed to mean e.g. age).
If you mean something else by it, then you’re using the terms in a non-standard way.
This isn’t an issue of organisms being able to extract more information from the environment; irrespective of how much information it extracts from the environment, you still need lots of information in addition to the genome to make a copy—and this is a big part of why Jurassic Park hasn’t already happened.
(By the way, based on our previous exchanges, we seem to be looking at similar problems and could help each other: one big hole in my knowledge is that of organic chemistry and thus how existing self-replicators work at the chemical level.)
I misspoke. I’ve fixed it now.
I assume you mean you’ve edited your previous comment. I’d appreciate it if, when people edit their posts or comments, they indicate that they have done so, and ideally how, in the very same comment/post. That said, I don’t want to be so nitpicky as to discourage contributions.
“almost all of the information content of an organism resides in the amino-acid sequence of its domains” is an accurate statement. The uterine environment is involved with the creation of another organism, but it is not part of the information content of the organism, except in the sense that everything that happens to an organism is recorded in damages to that organism.