Living is information processing: from molecules to global systems
Keith D. Farnsworth, John Nelson, Carlos Gershenson

TL;DR
This paper conceptualizes life as a universal information processing system across all scales, emphasizing the role of functional information in maintaining and evolving complex biological and ecological systems.
Contribution
It introduces a unified framework for understanding life as information processing, extending quantification of functional information from molecules to ecological systems.
Findings
Information processing underpins life at all levels.
Functional information can be quantified across biological scales.
Life's structure embodies information as both data and program.
Abstract
We extend the concept that life is an informational phenomenon, at every level of organisation, from molecules to the global ecological system. According to this thesis: (a) living is information processing, in which memory is maintained by both molecular states and ecological states as well as the more obvious nucleic acid coding; (b) this information processing has one overall function - to perpetuate itself; and (c) the processing method is filtration (cognition) of, and synthesis of, information at lower levels to appear at higher levels in complex systems (emergence). We show how information patterns, are united by the creation of mutual context, generating persistent consequences, to result in `functional information'. This constructive process forms arbitrarily large complexes of information, the combined effects of which include the functions of life. Molecules and simple…
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