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Fire does not contain cells. -- Living things contain DNA and/or RNA, proteins which contain the basic information cells use to reproduce themselves. Fire does not contain DNA or RNA.
4.0 - Feels like a large truck passing by or even the shaking caused by an explosion nearby. 5.0 - Unmistakable as an earthquake, this can rattle...
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Possible signs you need to see a therapist Overwhelmed. You might feel like you have too many things to do or too many issues to cope with. ......
Read More »Is fire alive? It moves, it feeds on oxygen, but it doesn't think or know where it is moving. Question Date: 2003-05-06 Answer 1: When sitting and watching a fire, it is easy to get the idea that it is alive. It moves dynamically, dancing and sending sparks. It is able to spread across a surface, and move about from combustible object to combustible object. It consumes such materials as wood, converting them into ash and other byproducts. It needs oxygen, as though it were breathing. However, fire is most definitely not alive.
It followed up with the SNES Classic Edition in 2017 – which sold 5.28 million – but hasn't produced any other micro-consoles since then. Apr 28, 2021
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Brands of Bottled Water That Are Reverse Osmosis Is Reverse Osmosis Bottled Water Safe to Drink? Reverse osmosis bottled water is completely safe...
Read More »Biologists have fought a bit over the basic definition of life, but all biologists would agree that fire is not alive. Remember, not all living things feed on oxygen (plants feed on carbon dioxide), so that's not a good definition for life. Not all living things move (again, plants do not really move), so that's not a very good definition of life. Not all living things "think", either (plants do not think).What your question really comes down to is how to define life. I've tried to come up with some basic definitions of life. -- For me, life can be defined by it's most basic building block -- a cell. If something does not contain at least one cell, it is not alive. Fire does not contain cells. -- Living things contain DNA and/or RNA, proteins which contain the basic information cells use to reproduce themselves. Fire does not contain DNA or RNA. -- Living things are made of matter, and you can weigh them. It may be hard to measure the weight of one bacteria, but you get the point. You cannot weigh fire, because it is simply energy. It has no mass. Fire is energy given off when matter burns. You can see it, but what you see is merely light, so you cannot hold it. -- Living things grow, and in growing they make new matter, but it's not just any old matter. Life is organization. All living things make the same basic things: proteins, fats and carbohydrates, for example. Fire cannot make proteins from the oxygen and hydrogen and carbon it "feeds on", just destroy proteins. This is a major difference. -- Living things require nutrients and water, and have complex ways of finding and using the things in their external environment that they need. Living things also have ways of sensing and responding to threat or attack. Answer 4: That's a great question because fire does have some things in common with living things. It needs fuel and oxygen. It can grow. It "reproduces" to make more fires. But fire is also different from living things. For one thing, it is not made of cells. All living things are made of cells. Also, when fire "reproduces," no information is passed on. In living things, DNA carries information from one generation to another. All living things are adapted to where and how they live by evolution, which changes DNA over time. Fire is basically the same every time. It may be bigger or smaller, hotter or less hot, or moving differently, but that's all because of the conditions right now, not because of information it inherited in DNA.
What is the opposite of preparation? idleness inaction inactivity inertness nonaction otiosity
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Love and Casual Sex In other words, males and females interpret situations rather differently; in this study male Tinder users indicated that they...
Read More »Another difference is that all living things come from other living things. One-celled living things divide to make two new one-celled things. Eggs, spores, seeds, babies, and growing new individuals from parts of their "parents" are all ways to reproduce new life from live things. Fire can come from a match, rubbing sticks together, a spark, or other things that are not fire. So fire is a great example of something that has some characteristics of life. Thinking about ideas like this helps us to really figure out what we mean by life. If you could make robots that made other robots, would they be alive? Answer 5: According to Hickman, Roberts, and Larson (1997), any living organism will meet the following seven basic properties of life:
Xbox beats PlayStation when it comes to backwards compatibility, which is a feature that lets you play games from older consoles. Xbox Series X can...
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A recent study published in The Independent suggests that less active individuals, “the lazy,” might be more brainy than those who are constantly...
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Willows are ideal for absorbing the most water. Wet areas, such as streams, lakes, and wetlands, are where they naturally grow. These plants have...
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Not having friends might feel inherently shameful. But it's not. Today, being friendless is more and more common. Whether it's high-profile...
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