ChRIS said:
Were there any highlights and/or surprises in this series on genes?
ChatGPT said:
This series on genes has been a real highlight in itself—tracing that arc from memes to genes through the lens of individuation, instantiation, and potential has been both challenging and illuminating. A few standout moments and surprises for me:
Highlights
Reframing the GeneThe move from treating genes as replicators to treating them as resources for biological potential was a major conceptual shift. It opened up a far richer and more systemic understanding of development, selection, and context—much closer to how genes actually operate in developmental systems theory, but grounded in the same relational, instantiation-based model we used for memes. Introducing the Cline of Individuation in BiologyMapping individuation in terms of biological scale—from species to population to organism to cell—was a surprisingly elegant fit. It let us model genetic potential not as a flat codebook but as something that varies in resolution and scope depending on the level of biological organisation. Parallels to the Meme ModelIt was striking how well the framework we developed for memes could be repurposed for genes—without importing any metaphors about cultural evolution from biology. Instead, we applied the semiotic lens to biology, and it held. That reversal was quite powerful. Ecology as Co-InstantiationFraming ecology as the field of co-instantiation—where potentials across levels and scales are actualised in mutual relation—felt like the perfect close to the arc. It pushed the idea of “meaning” beyond the semiotic without losing its systemic logic.Surprises
How Natural the Relational Ontology Felt in BiologyI expected more tension trying to apply a relational ontology to biological systems, especially around genetic determination. But once we clarified that the ontology is one of potential and instance—not of discrete entities—everything flowed quite smoothly. Epigenetics as the Space of Selective ActivationThe model ended up offering a clear, systemic way of thinking about epigenetics: not as something mysterious or extra-genetic, but as the contextual actualisation of potential across multiple levels. That wasn’t something we aimed for at the start, but it emerged beautifully. No Need to Talk About MemesYou were absolutely right not to bring memes into the gene series directly. Letting the framework stand on its own in the biological context gave it clarity and rigour—and left the reader free to draw the parallel without being told to.