Why is a bacterium alive? Organisms without even a primitive brain are able to move and divide and feed. Why?



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Why is a bacterium alive? Organisms without even a primitive brain are able to move and divide and feed. Why? and got a better answer

Response from Антон Владимирович[+++++]

Response from 0[+++++]
God wills everything.

Response from 0[+++++]
Instincts

Response from 0[+++++]
They have other mechanisms for survival.

Response from 0[+++++]
because they have programs in their dna molecule to move, divide, feed.

Response from 0[+++++]
Humans are complexly differentiated organisms, where protozoan cells are formed into a complex pipeline and modified, they are more dependent on each other, unlike the simplest biota. The unicellular cell, on the other hand, acts as a supercombine. And about life - just a biological machine used to transmit information.

Response from 0[+++++]
how old are you? did you study biology at all? if so how? bacteria moreover are not as complex organisms as humans and other mammals.

Response from 0[+++++]
This is a great mystery. Blagosti!

Response from 0[+++++]
you don't need a brain for that.

Response from 0[+++++]
Well they don't drive to work in the morning or go to a restaurant or write a book. They swim, they participate in very complex chemical reactions. Or should I say biochemical. This is some of the greatness of science, that Darwin came up with the idea when he observed his finches, and then it led to scientific evidence that even bacteria have similar mechanisms to those of humans at the cellular level.

Response from 0[+++++]
Control from the biofield! And the biofield contains information!

Response from 0[+++++]
You don't have a brain but you can reproduce!

Response from 0[+++++]
Hydrogen and oxygen atoms combine to form a water molecule without even a hint of a mogul and nothing - under certain conditions they combine beautifully. In bacteria, too, ordinary chemistry works - their whole life is a set of chemical reactions. They also react to stimuli through chemistry. There is no need for a brain, or nerves at all. Nerve fibers are a way to transmit the reaction to the stimulus quickly and over a long distance. No more than that. Bacteria have small distances inside, they don't need nerves.

Response from 0[+++++]
Life is basically the solar cycle of substances. Same as the water cycle, but more complex. In warm climates, water is liquid and chemically active. Reactions go by fairly quickly. You don't need a brain here. In cold climates, water cools and even freezes. As a result, the rate of chemical reactions slows down or even stops. That's why you need a brain to make the cycle function. The colder it is, the more

Response from 0[+++++]
There are protein receptors on the outer shell of the bacteria which attract the cell to nutrients; division came from coacervates and later it was coded by DNA for structural similarity of the two daughter images; nutrition also comes from them: the membrane just lets what it needs and what it needs has been evolutionarily developed.

 

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