The common consensus is that bacteria are not conscious. But some bacteria are attracted to, or repulsed by light. What, then, is being attracted or repulsed?

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The common consensus is that bacteria are not conscious. But some bacteria are attracted to, or repulsed by light. What, then, is being attracted or repulsed?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Let’s start with an easier example – photosensitivity in plants, I don’t think anyone would argue that a plant is sentient, yet how do they “know” where light is and how to grow towards it?

What basically happens is plants produce new cells for growth and the mechanism that controls the rate of growth is deactivated by light. So ironically the side of a plant that is exposed to the most like grows *the least*, meaning the dark parts grow more causing a bending motion *towards the light*. No self-awareness or consciousness is required, it’s just a chemical reaction.

Bacteria operate in a similar way. They have various “sensors” in their bodies that can sense things like light, heat, acidity, etc. Those “sensors” are essentially spring loaded, tightly packed molecules. Should light “spring the trap” the molecule unravels, changing it’s physical size causing a “push” or “bulge” of the cell either towards, or away from, the stimulus. The actual process is much more complicated but that’s the general gist while also showing how it’s a “dumb” reaction and not a something that involves “thought” or “planning”.

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