What's the difference between a seed and a virus?

What's the difference between a seed and a virus?

Seeds don't replicate inside other organisms. They're fundamentally different.

a virus spreads quicker making making them more lethal, in terms of reproductive rate

nothig their all the same bra

viruses look cool and spaceships

One is a virus and the other one is a seed

But which is which?

Is a virus alive?

One is a seed, and one is a virus. This is science.

no

yes

maybe

>One is a virus and the other one is a seed
>One is a seed, and one is a virus.

I'm getting mixed messages here, guys. Can you be clearer?

Seeds are tasty
Ive never eaten a virus

A virus injects its DNA strands into host cells of other organisms making these cells produce the protein which the rna strand corresponds to.

A seed is a sleeping cell that starts multiplying when it is ready. There you go op.

"life" does not have any fundamental, objective meaning. It is frequently a useful simplification for mental categorization, because it neatly summarizes a set of characteristics that are frequently found together. But when dealing with cases that have only some of the characteristics of life, and some of nonlife, the limitations of this familiar mental category become clear and it is no longer particularly useful. In these cases, any sharp boundary drawn between life and unlife is necessarily arbitrary and artificial.

Viruses are one of those cases where it becomes obvious that "life" isn't actually a fundamental category and that the normally-clear edge between life and unlife is in fact populated with edge cases.

As it happens, the arbitrary boundary has been set such that viruses are not officially "alive", but this is a decision of convention rather than anything particularly meaningful. It's like the semi-arbitrary borders between closely related species or subspecies, or the ruling that Pluto is not a planet, or the division of the ocean into "Atlantic" "Pacific" and "Arctic" oceans. We set the borders based solely on what's useful rather than any objective philosophical Oracle.

That must be the ugliest plot I've ever seen.

I don't know

It's a Turing Machine.

Is a seed alive?
Is an orange alive?

Why do regular polygons / polyhedrons in living things freak me out so much?

...

Are memes alive?

eh not really but depends on your definition of life
that's assuming that a virus is alive in the first place. i feel like because nature doesn't usually allow for such "perfect" shapes that when you do see one it's eerily off-putting