OpenWorm aims to develop a fully digital lifeform – a virtual nematode – in a completely open source manner.
OpenWorm raises fascinating questions about what we mean when we say something is alive. If and when this project succeeds in modeling the worm successfully, we’ll be faced with a new and fascinating concept to think with: a virtual organism. Imagine downloading the worm and running it in a virtual petri dish on your computer. What, exactly, will you be looking at? Will you consider it to be alive? What would convince you?
Perhaps creations like the digital C. elegans will start to break down our binary conception of the matter in the world as either living or not living. We’ll discover that we can create systems that exist in-between these two spheres, or that certain aspects of life as we know it are not required to meet our definition of being alive.
Article with contextual refs: http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/05/is-this-virtual-worm-the-first-sign-of-the-singularity/275715/
Paper on Monoaminergic Orchestration of Motor Programs in a Complex C. elegans Behavior