Abstract

The laws of physics are a prerequisite for us to make reliable predictions regarding our surroundings. By extension, making reliable predictions in biology requires laws of biology. The problem is that such laws are almost non-existent, because biological systems are hugely complex and diverse. As a consequence, it is difficult to make true statements covering all organisms on Earth—or even large classes of organisms. This difficulty translates directly into the challenge of identifying rules that govern biological systems. What would such biological rules or laws even look like? ‘The lawless pursuit of biological systems’ considers the future of systems biology and discusses how it might evolve as it matures as a field of investigation.

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