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Despite Miller's definition of living systems, their hierarchization might appear interesting at the levels introduced, which include atoms, organizations, and supranational systems. The definition also proposes that there is a non-living system on both sides of the hierarchy. On one side, there are inorganic molecules and, on the other side, inorganic planets and galaxies that demonstrate self-organized processes. | Despite Miller's definition of living systems, their hierarchization might appear interesting at the levels introduced, which include atoms, organizations, and supranational systems. The definition also proposes that there is a non-living system on both sides of the hierarchy. On one side, there are inorganic molecules and, on the other side, inorganic planets and galaxies that demonstrate self-organized processes. | ||
More: [http://www.isss.org/primer/earthsys.htm | More: [http://www.isss.org/primer/earthsys.htm Miller, J. G. (1982). “The earth as a system.”] | ||
=== chemical elements and chemical compounds === | === chemical elements and chemical compounds === |