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Into the Impossible With Brian Keating

There's a New Law of Nature — And It Changes Everything We Know About Life. Michael Wong - #546

Into the Impossible With Brian Keating

Brian Keating

Physics, Natural Sciences, Science

4.71.1K Ratings

🗓️ 23 March 2026

⏱️ 69 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Please join my mailing list here 👉 https://briankeating.com/list  to win a meteorite 💥 Michael Wong recently discussed theory of evolution on TED: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DSrf7ErdHWA  — in this conversation, we go deeper on the law of increasing functional information and what it means for life, complexity, and the future of science. 🔔 Subscribe for new episodes each week  🎧 Ad-free episodes on Patreon: patreon.com/drbriankeating  INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE — where Nobel Prize winners, physicists, and bold thinkers explore the biggest questions in science. Is there a second arrow of time? Astrobiologist and planetary scientist Dr. Michael Wong joins Brian Keating to explore the law of increasing functional information — a proposed new law of nature that may explain how complexity evolves across minerals, biology, AI, and the cosmos. Dr. Michael Wong of the Carnegie Institution for Science has been working with a cross-disciplinary group of scientists — the "Missing Law Group" — to propose something bold: a new law of nature. Their law of increasing functional information argues that evolving systems, whether biological or not, tend toward greater complexity and function over time. In this conversation, Brian and Michael unpack what functional information actually means, how it differs from Shannon entropy, and why it may describe something fundamental about the universe we live in. From the formation of minerals in stellar atmospheres to the evolution of life on Earth, Michael walks through how this framework applies across planetary science, astrobiology, and even cancer research. Brian pushes on the hard questions — the Fermi paradox, the boundary conditions of the law, its relationship to the second law of thermodynamics, and whether it truly qualifies as a "law" at all. Sean Carroll blurbed the book and later called it out on his podcast — Brian asks Michael about that tension directly. They also get into panspermia, the contingent role of cosmic collisions in shaping Earth's evolutionary history, the search for biosignatures on Mars and beyond, and what the rise of generative AI looks like through the lens of selection for function. This is a wide-ranging, technically honest conversation about one of the most ambitious proposals in contemporary science. Key Takeaways: 00:00:35 There May Be a Second Arrow of Time — and It Points Toward Complexity 00:01:35 The Law of Increasing Functional Information Explains How the Universe Evolves 00:07:15 Functional Information Measures How Well a System Performs a Specific Function 00:11:30 Three Universal Selection Pressures Drive All Evolving Systems 00:18:00 Mineral Evolution on Earth Is a Measurable Proof of the Law in Action 00:22:00 The Law Is a Tendency, Not a Guarantee — It Doesn't Resolve the Fermi Paradox 00:27:00 Life and Non-Life Contain the Same Building Blocks — the Difference Is in the Distributions 00:32:15 Cosmic Collisions Didn't Derail Evolution — They Opened New Possibility Spaces 00:50:00 Cancer Behaves Like an Evolving System — and That Could Change How We Treat It 01:05:15 AI Is a New Form of Evolving Life — and Without Stronger Selection Pressure, It's DangerousFeatured Guest ➡️  Follow Michael Wong  🌐 Website: https://miquai.myportfolio.com/  📚 The book: Time’s Second Arrow (co-authored with Robert Hazen) : https://www.amazon.com/Times-Second-Arrow-Evolution-Nature-ebook/dp/B0FJ2ZJL53 🏄‍♂️ Twitter: https://x.com/miquai — Brian's Links Join this channel to get access to perks like monthly Office Hours: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmXH_moPhfkqCk6S3b9RWuw/join  📚 Get my books: Think Like a Nobel Prize Winner: https://a.co/d/03ezQFu  Focus Like a Nobel Prize Winner: https://a.co/d/hi50U9U  Losing the Nobel Prize: http://amzn.to/2sa5UpA  Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems (audiobook): https://a.co/d/iZPi9Un  Follow me to ask questions of my guests:  🏄‍♂️ Twitter: https://twitter.com/DrBrianKeating  🔔 Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/DrBrianKeating?sub_confirmation=1 📝 Mailing list: http://briankeating.com/list   ✍️ Blog: https://briankeating.com/blog  🎙️ Audio-only: https://briankeating.com/podcast  — #physics #astrobiology #complexity #evolutionoflife #briankeating #intotheimpossible Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Well, first, to be just provocative, there's definitely life on Mars, right? We brought it there. Our rovers have hitchhikers on them. Microbial spores, right? They weren't completely sterilized. Not that the building blocks of life are found all over the universe. Maybe life is just made of the building blocks of the universe. We are literally generating an alien presence on our planet that co-evolves with us and was in some way spawned by us.

0:22.6

Today's guest comes bringing a provocative claim that we've been wrong all along and actually

0:27.9

that there's a second arrow of time. Michael Wong has come all the way from Washington, D.C.,

0:34.2

where he works at the Carnegie. Is it the Carnegie Institute?

0:38.7

Carnegie Institution for Science. The institution for science, home of many great scientists.C. where he works at the Carnegie. Is it the Carnegie Institute? Carnegie Institution for Science. Home of many great scientists. What's the definition of time? How do you define time?

0:43.3

Oh my goodness. How do I define time? I don't know if I have a definition for time. I think that

0:49.1

time is, you know, some axis upon which we can start to make measurements and derive metrics

0:58.0

through to measure things as they change through time. I'm not a physicist by training. So,

1:03.3

you know, maybe I should leave that to the physicist to define. Yeah, yeah. Well, I literally say things

1:09.2

like it's what a clock measures. I mean, that's effectively what physicists will say.

1:12.6

Yeah, yeah.

1:13.6

So I think, you know, time is essential because what the laws of nature try to describe is change

1:22.6

through time, right?

1:24.6

If I apply a force to an object, how does its acceleration change in the future?

1:30.8

And there's a certain kind of change through time that we describe as evolution. And so our new

1:37.1

conjecture, our new postulated law of nature is a law of evolution, of evolving systems,

1:43.1

of changing patterning, order, diversity,

1:47.2

complexity in the universe that we see all around us and that we understand has occurred

1:52.3

since the Big Bang through the generation of heavier and heavier isotopes to more

1:58.3

and more complex molecules and minerals to planets, and then at least one planet in the

2:04.7

universe that has life.

2:06.3

And this is where the thread ties to myself and why I would be thinking about arrows in time

...

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