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Ask HN: Do virus mutations break the laws of thermodynamics?

1 pointsby boldpandabearalmost 4 years ago
How does a non-living thing like a virus mutate?<p>I have heard virologists liken viruses to seeds but seeds have cells, metabolisms, water and other energy stores and active running processes — seeds are alive.

3 comments

thaynealmost 4 years ago
&gt; How does a non-living thing like a virus mutate?<p>The same way living things mutate.<p>&gt; Do virus mutations break the laws of thermodynamics?<p>No, it doesn&#x27;t violate the second law of thermodynamics, as far as we know, nothing does, that&#x27;s why it is called a law :). Even if entropy decreases locally (like in a single organism) the process generates more external entropy that causes the total entropy of the universe to increase.<p>&gt; but seeds have cells, metabolisms, water and other energy stores and active running processe<p>viruses just use the host cell&#x27;s &quot;metabolism, water and energy stores&quot;.
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rzzzwilsonalmost 4 years ago
Even if we assume a virus is a non-living thing, they reproduce by taking over a living thing, a cell. Mutations occur when a copy of the virus produced by the cell isn&#x27;t an exact copy. The copying requires energy provided by the cell, but the errors in the copying require no energy, per se, so the law of thermodynamics is not broken.
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slateralmost 4 years ago
No.