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Intelligent Design the Future

How Life Leverages the Laws of Nature to Survive

Intelligent Design the Future

Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture

Science, Philosophy, Astronomy, Society & Culture, Life Sciences

4993 Ratings

🗓️ 21 August 2023

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Left to their own devices, the natural result of physics and chemistry is death, not life. So how are we still breathing? On this ID The Future, host Eric Anderson concludes his conversation with physician Howard Glicksman about some of the remarkable engineering challenges that have to be solved to produce and maintain living organisms such as ourselves. Glicksman is co-author with systems engineer Steve Laufmann of the recent book Your Designed Body, an exploration of the extraordinary system of systems that encompasses thousands of ingenious and interdependent engineering solutions to keep us alive and ticking. In the “just so” stories of the Darwinian narrative, these engineering solutions simply evolved. They emerged and got conserved. Voila! But it takes more than the laws of nature to keep us from dying. In Part 1, Glicksman discussed how two laws of nature - diffusion and osmosis - must be innovated by living systems to avoid cell death. In this episode, Glicksman provides another example: how we regulate the flow of water and blood through our bodies without the excess leakage or shrinkage that can lead to cell death. The protein albumin is crucial. Along with helping to transport minerals and hormones, albumin vitally maintains blood volume by regulating the water flow in and out of the capillaries. How does our liver know how to make albumin, or how much of it to make? Can a gradual Darwinian process be credited with these essential innovations? Or do they bear hallmarks of design? Listen in as Dr. Glicksman explains this remarkable system, just one of many engineering feats our bodies perform every day to keep us alive.

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0:00.0

I d the future a podcast about evolution and intelligent design

0:12.3

welcome to I.

0:13.0

I D the Future. I'm your host Eric Anderson and I'm pleased to be joined again today by Dr. Howard Glitzman to continue our discussion about the many challenges life has to overcome in order to continue to survive.

0:24.0

Dr. Glitzman practices palliative medicine and is co-author of the recent book,

0:28.0

Your Design Body.

0:30.0

Welcome, Howard.

0:31.0

Thanks, Eric. It's great to be back.

0:33.0

So last time we challenged the notion that the natural result of physics, even as wonderful

0:38.8

and as fine-tuned as physics may be, would lead to living organisms. In fact we saw that the natural result of

0:45.4

physics and chemistry left to their own devices is to cause death, not life. So for those who might

0:51.6

just be joining this, Howard, maybe very briefly explain what you mean by that, and then I'd like to dive into a few more details.

0:57.0

Yeah, so what I'm basically saying is that the idea of Darwinism is basic, is that to say that the laws of nature on their own

1:05.2

left of their own devices can cause life, but with how we know that they actually caused death.

1:11.4

And what we talked about last time was we looked at two laws of nature,

1:16.2

diffusion and osmosis.

1:17.4

We looked at the cell level because we looked at the water and its solute.

1:21.2

So the cell, the cell has water inside it and it has high potassium, low sodium and high protein,

1:28.4

whereas the water outside the cell has high sodium, low potassium, and low protein.

1:33.7

So diffusion and osmosis, when left of their own devices,

1:37.4

are going to cause the sodium and the water

1:39.9

to enter the cell and the potassium to go out.

1:42.2

And when that happens, it causes death.

...

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