- Mon Jun 17, 2019 4:32 pm
#65651
I think you're looking at this more like a prediction of what the bacteria would do, as opposed to what would help the bacteria if they did do it. To use your analogy, it's not that we can predict that an animal would run in smooth lines to escape a predator, but that it would have a better chance of escaping if it did so than if it ran in random, erratic patterns that could have it running right back into the predator's mouth. The bacteria would have a better chance of moving away from the harmful substance if they ran away in smooth, straight lines than if it stopped, tumbled, and went off in a random direction, which might mean running right back at the harmful substance.
One thing to consider with your analogy, where it is perhaps a bit off, is that the harmful substance isn't chasing the bacteria as a predator might chase its prey. If you're thinking of a rabbit, for example, running in short bursts in varying directions, twisting a turning to foil a faster fox that is chasing it but which cannot turn as quickly, that makes sense in that scenario, but doesn't compare well to the situation in the passage. Instead, try this one: you encounter a raging fire. Are you better off running in a straight line away from it, or zigzagging completely at random as you try to escape?
Adam M. Tyson
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