Abstract
I coined a term 'supersystem' to designate highly integrated life systems such as the immune system, nervous system, and embryogenesis. While the mechanistic system is defined as a set of diverse elements so connected and related as to form an organic whole for a particular purpose, the 'supersystem' engenders its own elements from a single progenitor. The diverse elements thus generated form relationships by mutual adaptation and coadaptation, and thus they create a dynamic self-regulating system through self-organization. It is a closed self-satisfied system, yet open to the environment, receiving outside signals to transduce them into internal messages for self-regulation and expansion. Unlike a mechanistic system, the 'supersystem' has no defined purpose and determines its own fate by referring to its self-established behavioral pattern. Both the immune and nervous systems develop and function as a typical 'supersystem.' The prototype of the supersystem can be seen in embryogenesis and evolution. The concept of the supersystem can also be applied to the development of language, or a city, or other cultural phenomena that human beings have created as a result of their vital activities.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Tada, T. (1997). The immune system as a supersystem. Annual Review of Immunology. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.immunol.15.1.1
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.