Abstract
The idea behind this special theme journal issue was to continue the work we have
started with the INBIOSA initiative (www.inbiosa.eu) and our small inter-disciplinary
scientific community. The result of this EU funded project was a white paper
(Simeonov et al., 2012a) defining a new direction for future research in theoretical
biology we called Integral Biomathics and a volume (Simeonov et al., 2012b) with
contributions from two workshops and our first international conference in this field
in 2011. The initial impulse for this effort was given a year earlier by a publication of
one of the guest editors of this issue (Simeonov, 2010) in this journal. This time we
wish to provide a broader forum and more space to elaborate in detail some of the
most interesting concepts we have encountered in our discussions, as well as to invite
some new contributions of particular interest in the field. Another goal we had in
mind was to collect and review as many provocative perspectives as possible on the
same key topic we are interested before making a decision to follow a more focused
notion that would lead to a funded research program.
Therefore we welcomed the generous suggestion of Professor Denis Noble, FRS, who
is also editor of this journal to prepare a special theme issue entitled: “Can biology
create a profoundly new mathematics and computation?”
It has taken a while to invite and collect the contributions. Most of them had a couple
of revision cycles and adjustments after having been thoroughly discussed with
colleagues, incl. the editors of this issue. We think that the result we have obtained at
the end is a satisfactory one, since we succeeded to integrate a diversity of original,
but sometimes controversial and mutually excluding concepts organized within
chapters of a self-contained volume. The task of compiling all this was not easy at all.
Despite our efforts to position the articles of different authors and themes in a way
allowing their easy comprehension and relation to each other within the individual
chapters, some of them still require a sort of introduction to dissolve possible
ambiguities. This is what we are going to do in the following few paragraphs with the
hope that the reader (and some of the authors) would excuse our failures.