First draft of The Deal.
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@ -296,3 +296,51 @@ keywords = {Boolean P systems, Boolean networks, Reachability, Complexity},
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bibsource = {dblp computer science bibliography,
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https://dblp.org}
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}
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@article{BjornbergKGH2017,
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title = {Climate and environmental science denial: A review
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of the scientific literature published in 1990–2015},
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journal = {Journal of Cleaner Production},
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volume = 167,
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pages = {229--241},
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year = 2017,
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issn = {0959-6526},
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doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.08.066},
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url =
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{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652617317821},
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author = {Karin Edvardsson Björnberg and Mikael Karlsson and
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Michael Gilek and Sven Ove Hansson}
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}
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@article{ONeillB2010,
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author = {Saffron J. O’Neill and Max Boykoffb},
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title = {Climate denier, skeptic, or contrarian?},
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journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of
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the United States of America},
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volume = {107(39):E151},
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doi = {doi:10.1073/pnas.1010507107},
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year = {2010}
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}
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@misc{wikiClimate,
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author = "{Wikipedia contributors}",
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title = "Climate change --- {Wikipedia}{,} The Free
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Encyclopedia",
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year = "2024",
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howpublished =
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"\url{https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Climate_change&oldid=1210314463}",
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note = "[Online; accessed 26-February-2024]"
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}
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@book{DryzekNS2011,
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author = {Dryzek, John S. and Norgaard, Richard B. and
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Schlosberg, David},
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title = "{The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society}",
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publisher = {Oxford University Press},
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year = {2011},
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month = {08},
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isbn = {9780199566600},
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doi = {10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199566600.001.0001},
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url =
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{https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199566600.001.0001},
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}
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121
deal.tex
121
deal.tex
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@ -326,7 +326,7 @@ the cytoskeletal track it is attached to
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\label{fig:ratchet-motor}
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\end{figure}
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\section{A Deal: Mutually beneficial interactions}
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\section{The Deal: Mutually beneficial interactions}
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\label{sec:deals}
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Seeing Life as an ensemble of machines biases how we expect to collect
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@ -347,12 +347,119 @@ asymmetric relationship between the controller and the controlled,
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which is unnatural biological context because both the controller and
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the controlled are made out of the same kind of matter, and are
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ultimately embedded in the same environment.
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of a Deal with Life is to render the interactions \emph{mutually
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beneficial}: ideally, both systems engaging in the interaction
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should benefit from it. In practice, this should be translated into
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joint maximization of a pair of functions measuring the utility of the
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interaction for both parties, possibly with one of the two functions
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being prioritized over the other.
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This chapter outlines a conceptual framework putting symmetry back
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into the picture, \emph{the Deal with Life}: instead of
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surreptitiously lifting the human above and out of the living matter
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by self-designating ourselves as superior Engineers, I propose to
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account for the fact that we act \emph{within} Life and its complex
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feedback loops by looking to organize \emph{mutually beneficial
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interactions} with the living systems, as opposed to trying to
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control, hack, or engineer them. Since we are talking about the
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general mindset, the choice of words in not contingent: controlling,
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hacking, and engineering impose a vertical power relationship, while
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thinking in terms of mutual benefit admits that our target system has
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a trajectory of its own, which we would like to preserve it to some
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degree. Playing with words and summarizing the control-hack-engineer
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mindset as ``We control, Life obeys'' makes the power imbalance even
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more striking.
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Today, the most obvious inspiration for considering mutual benefit
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comes from the climate crisis: for centuries, we have acted on the
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environment expecting it to behave like a heat bath, i.e., to absorb
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whatever we throw at it without essentially changing its state.
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Besides brandishing a certain naïveté, this point of view is so
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difficult to abandon that is has become the epitome of science denial
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according to certain studies,
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e.g.~\cite{BjornbergKGH2017,ONeillB2010,wikiClimate}, as well
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as~\cite[page~155]{DryzekNS2011}. As these references and multiple
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others show, refusing to admit human cause as central to the climate
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crisis has been invariably and strongly supported by the fossil fuel
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industry. I suspect nevertheless that one of the reasons for the
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resilience of the denialist mindset is the deeply anchored feeling
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that we are engineers and the environment a mere tool. My own
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inspiration for the Deal with Life comes from theoretical biology
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discussions with Nicolas \textsc{Glade} at the TIMC lab in
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Grenoble\footnote{\url{https://www.timc.fr/}}, and specifically from
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the remarks outlined in Section~\ref{sec:mechanicism} above concerning
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the dominance of the engineering mindset in modern biology, especially
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in molecular biology, and the ruts it forces our thinking in.
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Thinking about mutual benefit in dealing with Life unpacks multiple
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different levels of caring about the destiny of the system of
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interest:
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\begin{itemize}
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\item \emph{Level 0}: This is the Engineer's mindset: fundamental
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reductionism and mechanicism---we control, Life obeys. At this
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level, we do not conceive of any kind of benefit to the
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target system.
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\item \emph{Level 1}: We aim to preserve the destiny of the target
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system to a certain degree. If it is a yeast population, we may
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want to not allow its size below a certain threshold, or if it is
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a farm animal, we may want to ensure a certain quality of life
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according to a set of measures.
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\item \emph{Level 2}: We aim to benefit the target system to a certain
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degree, while also extracting our own profit from the interaction.
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In the case of a farm animal, we may want to ensure that its the
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state of well-being be \emph{improved} in the context of its
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interaction with respect to a life without any human intervention.
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\end{itemize}
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All three levels of this hierarchy of mutual benefit are in fact
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already present in our interactions with living organisms.
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Respecting Level 1 is almost ubiquitously needed, since otherwise we
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may kill the system of interest before it is capable of producing the
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deliverable we are after. Level~2 manifests itself to different
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degrees in interactions with domesticated animals, especially in the
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context of increased awareness of the conditions to which livestock
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are typically treated in modern agriculture. Levels 1 and 2 are also
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progressively making their way to prominence in dealing with
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ecosystems: cutting down forests brings about various kinds of
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catastrophes, so it is now laudable to curb deforestation, and even to
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conduct reforestation campaigns.
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It would seem on the other hand that biomedical research is stubbornly
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fond of ignoring Levels~1 and 2, and instead focuses on proudly
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brandishing the Engineer's Level 0, claiming that if something does
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not work out today, it will certainly work out tomorrow, provided that
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tomorrow brings around more energy, more computing power, more
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workforce, more data. Yet again, in no way do I aim to deny or
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minimize the benefits of mechanicism and reductionism in
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biology---which has been instrumental in multiple groundbreaking
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achievements over the 20th century and beyond. I insist nevertheless
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that exclusively sticking to Level 0 of the hierarchy of mutual
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benefit is a fundamental limitation of thought. Lifting this
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limitation will undoubtedly open up a multitude of new approaches and
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solutions, as this chapter attempts to outline.
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A final argument for taking into consideration the destiny of the
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system of interest which has been lurking around the corner the whole
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time is that we as humans do not often have a choice on this matter:
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the living system serving as a target is often required to survive our
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intervention, and sometimes to maintain the majority of the functions
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it had before the intervention. That biomedical research is reluctant
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to go from accepting this obvious constraint to taking more holistic
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approaches including mutual benefit is possibly due to the complexity
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that awaits us on the very threshold of the comfortable Engineer's
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mindset. In other words, it is much easier to see the disease as
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separate from the carrying organism, and imagine curative strategies
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tightly focused on a well defined set of diseased structures than to
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admit that the onset of the disease is a consequence of a complex
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interplay of multiple factors. Indeed, conceiving of diseases from
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this more holistic viewpoint is often prohibitively complex with the
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currently available data and knowledge, all while the reductionist
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approach gives at least some solutions. I claim however that this is
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no way should hinder our motivation to tackle the complexity of the
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more holistic approach.
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Finally, the way I employ the terms ``deal'' and ``mutual benefit''
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corroborates no particular social ideology. The Deal with Life simply
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calls for including the potential benefit of the target system into
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the picture by establishing a measure of it. It is up to the
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protagonists of the concrete context, problem, or practical
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application to decide whether, how much, and in which way to
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prioritize this benefit over the profit we humans are expecting
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to extract.
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\printbibliography[heading=subbibliography]
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