spacer
 
 
11
JUL
spacer   Animation of life inside the cell as high art?
Posted by O'Leary at 7:34 AM
 
Here’s another great animation of life inside the body and the cell, from Hybrid Medical Animations.
They enter the realm of high art, achieving a combination of Truth and Beauty ... - from an unidentified endorsement
The music is well suited too. I wrote to the friend who drew it to my attention,

Medical animations are quite helpful because many people still believe the “brick theory of the cell.” = that the body is built out of cells as a wall is of bricks, with the brick being less organized than the wall.

 But the cell is something between a factory and a supercomputer.

The remarkable thing is that the wretched caterpillar I found on a rosebud and threw to the wolf spider was like that. As is the spider itself.

One realizes that Darwin’s explanation for how all this came to be is not even relevant. Darwin argued that it all happened because the stronger life form survives to breed.

That, of course, is doubtless true, but it is not going to give you a supercomputer! – d.

(Note: The video starts a couple of seconds after you access the page.) Note to teachers: Teachers may wish to point out to students who have questions in this area that scientists in Darwin's and Huxley's day thought that the cell was a very simple unit that related to the body as the brick does to a wall. They thought that the question they needed to answer was, How might a structure like a wall might be built? The question we really need to answer is, how might a structure like a supercomputer be built? You will find the chapter on "specified complexity" in The Design of Life helpful in introducing students to "information" as a science concept.
 
  Add Comment   |   Email this Blog
 

No response for this post

   
button recent post Recent Post
arrowBrain: The turtle really did beat the rabbit, you know ...
arrowMichael Behe and Darwin's Big Idea
arrowNeuroscience: Getting past the "You are a computer made of meat" phase
arrowIntelligent design controversy and media: Reasons to be cautious
arrowThe difference between the mind and the brain ... in under one minute
Archives
 
arrowOctober 2008 (5)
arrowSeptember 2008 (13)
arrowAugust 2008 (2)
arrowJuly 2008 (8)
arrowJune 2008 (3)
arrowMay 2008 (20)
arrowApril 2008 (5)
arrowMarch 2008 (6)
arrowFebruary 2008 (10)
arrowJanuary 2008 (7)
arrowDecember 2007 (10)
 
 
spacer