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The evolution of mechanoreceptors isn't something I'm particularly familiar with. It certainly doesn't garner the attention that the evolution of sight does. Have you tried searching for 'mechanoreceptor evolution' on Google Scholar? I get a number of results, many of which focus on the hydra, which is a commonly used model for the evolution of the nervous system. For example:
http://www.unige.ch/~galliot/pdf/2004-Miljkovic-Biosystems.pdf
I'm not as interested in the subject as you are and I don't have the time to devote to researching it, but I'd be interested in reading any concensus you can come up with from your readings.
Chemoreception.How could a bacterium cell grab a molecule of glucose without being able to sense that it had grabbed it?
Chemoreception.
But the bacteria you asked about have neither mouths nor stomachs.Chemoreception involves taste and smell though, right?. That's how it would detect food. I've smelled and tasted sulphur driving certain highways in Texas and New Jersey and the source was at least a half mile away. But I wouldn't know I had food in my mouth or in my stomach without the sense of touch.
On a related note: I got some plant seeds a month ago (Pride of Barbados). I put 4 seeds under dirt, and left 4 seeds sitting on a table. The seeds surrounded by dirt have changed into plants. The seeds surrounded by air remain what they are. I guess a chemical reaction took place between the husks of the seeds in contact with dirt, which didn't take place between the husks of the seeds in contact with air.
What I can't fathom is how matter could ever come to "know" that it is in contact with something, or what it is in contact with. Chemical processes such as chemoreception could take place from here to eternity without the matter involved ever being conscious of what was happening.
I think evolutionists claim that sensation is the foundation of consciousness, but I have a hard time imagining how sensation even arose.
Did you water the seeds on the table ?
I didn't water the seeds in the dirt either. I think there is usually moisture in air as well as in dirt.
Have you tried asking a biologist that works in this area about your question, Chesterton? If you're genuinely interested in the question, I'm sure someone with the relevant knowledge would be happy to provide an answer.