ABSTRACT

Attention is paid to the issues of inheritance and development of information systems in unicellular and multicellular organisms in volitional programming.

As follows from the previous three chapters, the program organization is common to all evolutionary stages: unicellular, multicellular and human.

Basic program results: creation of makers, energy extraction and storage, object preparation, arrangement of sites are the same for all organisms.

From the standpoint of the program approach, evolution is adaptive changes in organism programs.

Since the emergence of multicellular organisms, the external programs have undergone greater evolutionary changes because these programs ensure the successful fulfillment of survival tasks. The essence of the multicellular evolution was the emergence of a specific cellular programs and formation programs of social sharing cell products in centralized supply food and oxygen, as well as information exchange between cells.

In humans, essential evolution changes were reduced to the appearance of several new brain regions, which led to the emergence of fundamentally new opportunities for independent volitional creation of external programs.

The information system, embedded in the cell and developed in multicellular organisms, manifested itself in the conscious volitional programs of a person.