Taxonomy summary

The taxonomy functionality organizes and classifies organisms into categories based entirely on their genetic composition.
- No pre-made assumptions. The system does not rely on any predefined species or groups. It doesn't assume anything about what an organism is or where it belongs in the biological hierarchy. Instead, it uses only the genetic information provided to determine the classification.
- Completely deterministic. The process is entirely predictable and consistent. If you give the same genetic composition to the system multiple times, it will always produce the same classification and associated traits. There is no randomness or subjective interpretation involved.
- Grouping by genetic patterns. The system analyzes the organism's genetic makeup and sorts it into the classic taxonomy levels of categories, from very broad groups (like domain) to highly specific ones (like species). These groupings are determined by patterns and variations found in the genetic data.
- No external definitions. The system doesn't rely on existing species or taxonomies, and classifies organisms purely based on the input genetic data.
In summary, the taxonomy classification classifies organisms objectively and deterministically, driven entirely by their genetic composition without relying on predefined categories or external assumptions.