As a person who knows next to nothing about how the brain or the genes that configure it work, I tend to think of this in terms of 80s video games like River Raid. The level data for these games, if stored naively, would fill the computer's available memory many times over. So they just store a pseudorandom number generator seed along with a few other parameters. Coupled with a few rules to make the level playable, it can generate a seemingly impossible number of levels with very little stored data.Maybe the genes just encode a few crucial rules and the rest just emerge from that.
Oh, and I know even less about how the universe works. But I tend to think of it in the same terms: Emergent phenomena stemming from simple rules à la Game of Life.
kenver|3 months ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsumption_architecture
EvanAnderson|3 months ago
There are very simple algorithms that generate (or maybe just expose) complex structures already "present" in the universe.