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the living matterisl of cell is​

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Answered by Anonymous
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Protoplast

Answered by allanswerin1
0

Answer:

Well, a cell is living because the "things" work together to the processes necessary for life, but the "things" in isolation are not living. So there are no living things in a cell (some might argue that the mitochondria, and maybe chloroplast is, or once was, a living thing).

This is somewhat similar to asking "what are the beautiful, emotion-evoking "things" in a painting". It just doesn't make sense, because these properties are what is referred to as emerging properties. It is not contained in any of the parts, or even the sum of the parts. It is a property that only emerges from the exact way the parts in this specific case interact or are arranged. The components of a cell would not be "life", unless they were arranged in a very specific manner. The same for a painting, it would not be beautiful unless the different paints/colors are arranged in a certain way.

Of course, the definition of life is somewhat fussy; people can't even agree whether a virus is alive or not.

But none (except perhaps the mitochondria and chloroplasts) of the individual components (or "things") in a cell is living.

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