> It seems that a meme - in transit (on paper, e-mail, some type of non-thinking
> host) would be similar to the DNA that is not in use, or DNA fragments without the
> tools to assemble the fragments until in the mind. Just a thought.
>
> Bill Roh
>
Or like an RNA virus - it's in a completely different format.
> Nathaniel Hall wrote:
>
> > Richard Brodie wrote:
> > >
> > > Memes are replicators in minds. The term "replicator" is used to denote any
> > > information that participates in evolution by natural selection. These
> > > definitions are widely accepted in the field, so it doesn't help much to
> > > propose new definitions for existing terms.
> > >
> > > Richard Brodie
> >
> > I can almost live with that, but what about information that resides in
> > a computer or book? Does that information then become a potential meme
> > until it is replicated into a mind? If the answer to that is yes than I
> > think that's a decent definition.
> >
> > Nate Hall
-- Nathan Russell frussell@frontiernet.net
"It is now time for the human race to enter the Solar System" -Dan Quayle on the possibility of a manned mission to Mars
(Well, Danny Boy, the rest of us are already here, but we'll wait for you)