Hi Ines,
Thanks for your reply.
Hmm. I had never thought of the term 'animate' as having religious connotations...i should check my bible more often ;) However, i do like your way of describing them as systems where entropy decreases...at least to an extent.
That is, don't viruses then qualify as systems exhibiting agency? Clearly, their action expresses regulation/control via their inner and outer environs. I don't have a problem defining them as animate entities, albeit very simple ones. For me, another requirement for true agency is that their main objective is intrinsic survival (both individually and generationally). That is, their intrinsic inner and outer surroundings must be directly involved in the process of evolution...only this way can their entropy truly decrease. Thus, the virus qualifies but the man-made machine does not. That is, although the machine can perform functions that decrease entropy, it cannot do so such that its inner and outer surroundings are fundamentally oriented towards its own perpetuation. My brother drives a back hoe. Such machines can do things that no human being can do, but that does not make them animate beings. In the same way, we can make machines that might 'think' much better than ourselves, but i don't think they have any more agency than a back-hoe. Although, I think such agency could become possible in a man-made cyber-universe where some cyber-equivilent to a relationship between inner and outer environs gains the capacity to regulate those environs. What the status of such a cyber-agency would be in our material universe will be a question for folk who are younger that I. I would love to hear your response to the above.
Cheers,
William