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Finding Genius Podcast

Era of the Cell: William B. Miller, Jr., Shares Dynamic Theory of Cognition-Based Evolution

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 8 November 2020

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This special episode highlights a new way to understand the evolution of life on earth. Willian B Miller, Jr., takes Darwinism's theory of evolution as a jumping point for this evolved theory based on cellular intelligence. Listen in for an enriching and moving conversation about the origin and evolution of life.

Richard and Bill Miller discuss

  • Why a cell, because it can receive information, assess it, and deploy its resources and problem-solve, has intelligence,
  • Why it is vital to understand that cells work together, not haphazardly, to collaborate and cooperate with a codependent mechanism, and
  • How, therefore, cells are measuring, predictive entities working together to share information and better engineer a state in equilibrium with their environment.

William B. Miller, Jr., left a career in radiology to become an evolutionary biologist. His ideas have helped Richard, who's interviewed thousands of scientists, understand evolution in a fundamentally different way—a step beyond Darwinism theory. Miller has a publication in Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology called "Cellular senomic measurements in Cognition-Based Evolution," which establishes this evolutionary concept.

This podcast explains in clear and understandable language the gist of the article and where these ideas stands in the era of biological evolution. "It's not your father's evolution," jokes Miller. Richard replies with the opening line of the abstract: "all living entities are cognitive," and this is the center of Miller's article. 

Miller asserts that scientific examinations have proven that all cells are intelligent: a cell can take in information, process it, and make decisions: in other words, it can adapt. As Stephen Hawking said, intelligence is the ability to adapt. Furthermore, it can communicate to other cells purposefully what it has measured and why. Cellular intelligence may differ than human intelligence, but it is complex, able to solve a maze, retain memory, and collectively work together with other entities.

He emphasizes that cells work together, and not just haphazardly, to get better information; in fact, he says that "each cell is in service to other cells," and this is central to cognition-based evolution. Their conversation takes a deep dive into the essentials of this concept with concrete examples, from our immune system to breast feeding to biofilm construction. Listen in for a fascinating exploration of one of the most revolutionary scientific theories of our time.

Available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2Os0myK

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Forget frequently asked questions common sense common knowledge or Google how about advice from a real genius

0:06.6

95% of people in any profession are good enough to be qualified and licensed 5% go above beyond. They become very good at what they do.

0:15.0

But only 0.1 percent are real Jesus.

0:18.2

Richard Jacobs has made it his life's mission to find them for you. He hunts down and interviews geniuses in every field, sleep

0:25.2

science, cancer, stem cells, ketogenic diets, and more. Here come the geniuses. This is the

0:31.2

Finding Genius Podcast.

0:33.0

That is Richard Jacobs.

0:34.0

Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:41.0

I have a special guest and a special podcast today. It's

0:43.6

William B Miller Jr and even though we've gotten really specific on his

0:47.7

name, there's still other William Miller Jr's. He's in Arizona. He was a

0:52.0

radiologist for I guess approximately 30 years and he went through an evolution himself and now he's an evolutionary biologist. He's become a friend and I've asked him hundreds and hundreds of questions about various aspects of science and biology and he's tolerated them and answered them.

1:08.0

I wanted to have him today because one of his papers that he submitted and was improved by progress in

1:14.8

biophysics and molecular biology. I understand it. It took me many reads and

1:20.0

many conversations to understand it. The ideas in it I think are incredibly important

1:24.7

for all of science in general and I say that from my perspective of having interviewed 2,600 people in the past four years.

1:31.9

So I want to go through the paper with Bill and have

1:33.8

them explain the background of it and it's so dense the information and new that

1:39.3

we're probably going to just go through the abstract to define everything in it. But anyone that wants to read the paper, or at least get an idea of it, I think this will help. So, Bill, thanks for coming. How you doing?

1:49.0

It's a privilege. Thank you for having me on. I want to assure your listeners that although I may have undergone a personal evolution

1:54.8

I still only have two legs and two arms. I haven't changed that much yet.

2:00.0

So the paper will start with the name, it's called cellular synomic measurements in

...

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