Krimel and all:

Ron posted a section from chapter 12 of Lila, including this part:

In the past the logic has been that if chemistry professors are composed 
exclusively of atoms and if atoms follow only the law of cause and effect, then 
chemistry professors must follow the laws of cause and effect  too. But this 
logic can be applied in a reverse direction. We can just as easily deduce the 
morality of atoms from the observation that chemistry professors are, in 
general, moral. If chemistry professors exercise choice, and chemistry 
professors  are composed exclusively of atoms, then it follows that atoms must 
exercise choice too.  The difference between these two points of view is 
philosophic, not scientific.  The question of whether an electron does a 
certain thing because it has to or because it wants to is completely irrelevant 
to the data of what the electron does.

dmb says:

The logic of the past reduces chemistry professors to atoms and, as you can 
see, the MOQ reverses that reductionism.  
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