- Joined
- Sep 16, 2005
- Messages
- 5,623
- Reaction score
- 605
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Independent
Roberdorus, a sperm and egg, before merging, are nevertheless living biological organisms. They may not be equipped for long-term survival, but they each exhibit rather more liveliness than, say, a reproducing virus. And when they stop, they are considered to have died.
Now for a digression; let's consider a "chimera". This organism arises when two individual blastocysts merge. Prior to the merge, each blastocyst is a living biological organsim, as you well know. They are not really well-equipped for long-term survival (if they cannot find a womb from which to extract nutrients, they will die), but they certainly are "alive". Well, after they merge, they begin to cooperate in constructing an overall chimeric organism. Many details of that remain to be discovered, but it is a fact that this can and does happen. So, the yet-to-merge blastocysts qualify as an "earlier stage" of the chimera, see?
OK, when sperm and egg merge, they begin to cooperate in constructing an overall organism. Many details of this are well known, and the interesting thing is, it is possible, due to the preceding paragraph, to consider this new organism to be a special kind of chimera. Heh! As a result, the sperm and egg can indeed be considered to be an earlier stage of that new organism....
Now for a digression; let's consider a "chimera". This organism arises when two individual blastocysts merge. Prior to the merge, each blastocyst is a living biological organsim, as you well know. They are not really well-equipped for long-term survival (if they cannot find a womb from which to extract nutrients, they will die), but they certainly are "alive". Well, after they merge, they begin to cooperate in constructing an overall chimeric organism. Many details of that remain to be discovered, but it is a fact that this can and does happen. So, the yet-to-merge blastocysts qualify as an "earlier stage" of the chimera, see?
OK, when sperm and egg merge, they begin to cooperate in constructing an overall organism. Many details of this are well known, and the interesting thing is, it is possible, due to the preceding paragraph, to consider this new organism to be a special kind of chimera. Heh! As a result, the sperm and egg can indeed be considered to be an earlier stage of that new organism....