Killing and dying are seprate things. When cancer cells are dying it will be their natural death but why cancer treatments that will be killing.
Not to what is being killed and dying as a result of being killed. Which of course is one of the basic problems in cancer treatment, how do you kill the cancerous cells without affecting, and thus killing, surrounding healthy cells?
Does it look not bit odd that cancer cells become independent but don't have mind?
All cells are independent to some degree or other. When they act in concert it is general considered an organism, organ or organ system. So it doesn’t look a “bit odd that cancer cells become independent but don't have mind”.
No, that is natural death. However encouraging it by intervention can be taken as killing.
Your body kills things all the time, including those cells that have reached their life expectancy. If not, cells would keep reproducing and our cellular load would become more than the possible nutritional intake could sustain.
I am not sure. But I am worried how they are independant without mind? You know, memory is a big problem here.
Not really, some cells present
antigens (certain proteins) or certain antigen receptors (places bits of protein can bind to) on their surface as response from perhaps an earlier infection, that helps to recognize a subsequent infection. In that regard it can be considered a “memory” of that pervious infection. My car is independent of my house yet nether has any mind. If I slam my car into my house, my house will now have an indentation of my car on its surface (a car receptor or a place where a car like mine could fit). A memory of that impact to some extent. Yet that impact gives neither my car nor my house a mind as a result (and the event might seriously bring into question my mind at the time).
There can be difference in normal infections & epidemic infection. In later it can/should still be body-controlled but in later it may be germ controlled. Germs can be attracted or owerpower. We might definately be attracting many insects probably due to our bio-instabilities or bio-imbalances.
I think you are disregarding a particular “imbalance”, where ones own immune system begins to attack the body (autoimmune diseases). Just as in the difficulty with distinguishing cancerous cells to kill from those other healthy cells. The body (and specifically the immune system) can fail to recognize (again often by antigens and receptors) healthy cells from those infected or some infection or injury. The immune system goes into overdrive and begins attacking the very cells or systems it should protect. Myself , I inject a
tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (a biological protein that binds to certain cellular antigen receptors, particularly for inflammation response) that keeps my immune system at bay and prevents it from destroying critical parts of my own joint function. So a “body-controlled” attack on one’s own body subsequently controlled by the introduction of an injected biological
fusion protein .