culture in plants
I just read Gillies' review of Popper's book A World of Propensities. A
point made by Popper is that plants have "knowledge". Gillies disagrees, but I believe it is because the word knowledge is ambivalent, referring broadly to a) persistent information based on past experience, or b) culturally transmitted information or theoretical knowledge. I have material on plant memory, and it seems clear that plants can be informed by past experience that informs future behavior. However, I wonder about plants having "culture". If culture were defined very broadly as the transmission of signals between individual plants that affect the recipient's behavior, I would appreciate knowing of any scholarly work on the subject. Such a transmission would probably require a vehicle, and plants I suppose (out of ignorance) do communicate with such things as pollen and perhaps in the ground through proteins or even through bactria, which can be transmitters of information from one entity to another. Can anyone cite material on any such protein or bacterial communication between plants? Haines Brown |
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