Guglielmo Militello

CNRS/IHPST
  •  15
    This chapter explores how eukaryotic cells achieved new levels of functional integration through the division of their internal space into intracellular membrane-bound compartments. By comparing the internal membranes of prokaryotes and eukaryotes, it argues that these organelles partition the intracellular space in different ways and perform distinct functions, enhancing overall cellular operations. In prokaryotes, constitutive processes primarily occur in the cytoplasm, which exerts near-total…Read more
  •  25
    This chapter explores the role of system-level reproduction in achieving functional integration in biological individuals by analysing and comparing binary fission in bacteria with mitosis in unicellular eukaryotes. It argues that coordinated system-level reproduction necessitates the integration of reproduction, growth, and metabolism. These processes form the physiological foundation for unifying intra- and cross-generational functions, providing insight into the continuity between constitutiv…Read more
  •  21
    This chapter explores the concept of biological autonomy as interpreted through Maturana and Varela’s autopoietic framework and the organisational account. It examines the type of functional integration necessary for a biological system to achieve autonomy and teleology. The chapter argues that autonomy requires the mechanistic integration of functions contributing to self-maintenance and agential capacities. This integration demands a specific organisation of the system’s components, allowing i…Read more
  •  11
    Biological regulation is a fundamental characteristic of living organisms, enabling them to satisfy internal physiological needs and adapt to environmental changes. This chapter explores the relationship between biological regulation and functional integration. I argue that there is an organisational closure between the regulatory subsystem (R), the processes responsible for self-maintenance (C), and the signalling subsystem (S). Clarifying the functional integration between R, C, and S has two …Read more
  •  15
    This chapter synthesises the findings from the previous eight chapters to define functional integration. It introduces a broad concept of functional integration and critically assesses its explanatory value in understanding eukaryogenesis. Following this, it provides a more precise and robust characterisation of functional integration, exploring its theoretical implications within the ongoing philosophical debate on organismality, individuality, collective organisations, autonomy, major evolutio…Read more
  •  14
    This chapter examines three principal theories of eukaryogenesis and elucidates why the transition from prokaryotes to eukaryotes constitutes a major evolutionary transition, as defined by Maynard-Smith and Szathmáry. It argues that these theories, alongside Maynard-Smith and Szathmáry’s framework, offer intriguing insights into this evolutionary process, which remains an enigma. From a philosophical perspective, eukaryogenesis challenges our understanding of how new biological organisations att…Read more
  •  16
    This chapter examines how constraints on the motility of individual components—such as symbionts and organelles—within eukaryotic cells affect their autonomous interactive capacities and how this influences the constitutive autonomy of the entire collective association. It argues that while the motility of most symbionts and organelles is controlled by the host, this control is exercised in different ways. Symbionts may lose their motile abilities but retain the capacity to interact autonomously…Read more
  •  24
    This chapter introduces the book by examining the critical role of functional integration in both the life sciences and philosophical discourse. In life sciences—encompassing cell biology, evolutionary biology, physiology, and pathophysiology—functional integration describes the causal interconnections among an organism’s components (such as cells, tissues, and organs) that enable systemic functioning. Philosophically, it is central to debates on biological functions, where it underscores the sy…Read more
  •  13
    This chapter explores the structural constraints and physiological mechanisms that enable symbiotic associations among prokaryotes to develop into physiologically integrated organisations. Specifically, it investigates the conditions that facilitate the transformation of endosymbionts into organelles, as exemplified by the evolution of mitochondria and plastids. The chapter argues that biofilms and bacterial endosymbiosis exhibit diverse spatial organisations that impose unique constraints on th…Read more
  •  43
    This book explores the main biological dimensions underlying functional integration and examines how they contribute to defining a biological individual as both a physiological and evolutionary unit. Functional integration lies at the heart of most definitions of both organisms and biological individuals, making it explanatorily relevant to biology as well as to the philosophy of biology. However, the notion—typically referring to any causal interdependence among biological functions—remains bro…Read more
  •  30
    Compte rendu de Quentin Hiernaux, Du comportement végétal à l’intelligence des plantes?
    Lato Sensu: Revue de la Société de Philosophie des Sciences 10 (1): 117-119. 2023.
    Compte rendu de Quentin Hiernaux, Du comportement végétal à l’intelligence des plantes?
  •  700
    Much of the current research in regenerative medicine concentrates on stem-cell therapy that exploits the regenerative capacities of stem cells when injected into different types of human tissues. Although new therapeutic paths have been opened up by induced pluripotent cells and human mesenchymal cells, the rate of success is still low and mainly due to the difficulties of managing cell proliferation and differentiation, giving rise to non-controlled stem cell differentiation that ultimately le…Read more
  •  83
    Structural and organisational conditions for being a machine
    with Álvaro Moreno
    Biology and Philosophy 33 (5): 35. 2018.
    Although the analogy between macroscopic machines and biological molecular devices plays an important role in the conceptual framework of both neo-mechanistic accounts and nanotechnology, it has recently been claimed that certain complex molecular devices cannot be considered machines since they are subject to physicochemical forces that are different from those of macroscopic machines. However, the structural and physicochemical conditions that allow both macroscopic machines and microscopic de…Read more
  •  913
    Functional Integration and Individuality in Prokaryotic Collective Organisations
    with Leonardo Bich and Alvaro Moreno
    Acta Biotheoretica (3): 391-415. 2020.
    Both physiological and evolutionary criteria of biological individuality are underpinned by the idea that an individual is a functionally integrated whole. However, a precise account of functional integration has not been provided so far, and current notions are not developed in the details, especially in the case of composite systems. To address this issue, this paper focuses on the organisational dimension of two representative associations of prokaryotes: biofilms and the endosymbiosis betwee…Read more
  •  95
    Thinking in 3 dimensions: philosophies of the microenvironment in organoids and organs-on-chip
    with Silvia Caianiello and Marta Bertolaso
    History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 45 (2): 1-35. 2023.
    Organoids and organs-on-a-chip are currently the two major families of 3D advanced organotypic in vitro culture systems, aimed at reconstituting miniaturized models of physiological and pathological states of human organs. Both share the tenets of the so-called “three-dimensional thinking”, a Systems Physiology approach focused on recapitulating the dynamic interactions between cells and their microenvironment. We first review the arguments underlying the “paradigm shift” toward three-dimensiona…Read more