this post was submitted on 11 Feb 2026
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What if, though, “selves” are present in those very cells, ahead of the point at which they merge to form a greater whole? It might sound outlandish, but biological simulations are indicating that those minuscule units of life, which we usually think about as passive machines – cogs blindly governed by the laws of physics – have their own goals and display agency. Surprisingly, even simple networks of biomolecules appear to display some degree of a self, a revelation that could lead to novel ways of treating health conditions with far fewer side effects.

What’s more, some biologists say this new grasp of selfhood can reveal what is special about life and how it began in the first place. “The origins of agency coincide with the origins of life,” says cognitive scientist Tom Froese at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology in Japan.

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[–] marcela@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 3 days ago

For example, opioids like morphine provide effective relief from chronic pain, but people quickly develop tolerance to such drugs and the only option is to increase the dose, which can lead to addiction and, later on, withdrawal risks.

This is not even how opioids lead to addiction. They are antagonists of endorphin receptors. On another note, AFAIK tolerance and addictiveness are separate aspects of psychoactive substances, not causally related as implied by the article.

It makes me wonder, in the aftermath of an opioid epidemic created by corporate greed, why some people would try to "fix opioids" in that regard.