Decoding nature’s masterful engineering using math (TMEB #2)

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  • Опубликовано: 22 июл 2024
  • Logic gates in biology can be set up to lead to timing important biological events. How is this done?
    edit: at 4:00, not all pathways make use of this motif. This is just one way timing can happen in biology
    Uri Alon's Book:
    www.amazon.ca/Introduction-Sy...
    Music:
    City Life - Artificial.Music (No Copyright Music)
    Link: www.youtube.com/watch?v=caT3j...
    Pure Water by Meydän
    Link: • Meydän - Pure Water [C...
    Forever Sunrise - by Jonny Easton
    Link: • Forever Sunrise - Soft...
    Softwares used:
    Manim CE
    Keynote
    Blender
    Molecular Nodes by ‪@BradyJohnston‬
    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    1:00 A few issues to address
    2:51 Nodes in Biology
    3:23 Feed Forward Loop
    4:11 Logic gates in biology
    5:27 The math behind delays
    9:15 How is flagella production controlled
    11:06 Outtro

Комментарии • 268

  • @mitben0184
    @mitben0184 Год назад +253

    Ah, so this is why my biology major required so many math classes!

    • @NoorquackerInd
      @NoorquackerInd Год назад +17

      My friends just have to do calc 1 and then act like it's so many math classes

    • @corvo7743
      @corvo7743 Год назад +4

      @@NoorquackerInd differential equations was the last one I had to do for engineering

    • @kentheengineer592
      @kentheengineer592 Год назад

      Mathematical Sciences

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Год назад

      @@NoorquackerIndmeanwhile I am doing a physics and math double major and take literally 12 times as many math classes.

    • @jobobminer8843
      @jobobminer8843 Год назад

      I love how this implies/communicates that your biology major didn't actually teach you why you needed the math but this video did.

  • @awsomesaucers97
    @awsomesaucers97 Год назад +55

    The "Classical Mechanics of Biology", where things are reducible to the point of firm mathematics and analytic solutions but not lacking in insight to the real world phenomena. Very well put

  • @adityagupta5492
    @adityagupta5492 Год назад +155

    I am a first year student in IIT(Indian institute of technology) studying biotechnology. This is one of the best channels I came across to enhance my knowledge. The courses we have right now are focusing more towards genes and sequencing them, and a lot of it seems interesting! Hoping for more such amazing videos👌

    • @regulusmuphrid4891
      @regulusmuphrid4891 Год назад +7

      Damn I really wish my degree was like that, here in Mexico Biotechnology degrees are more directed towards bioprocesses, a friend of mine actually got an schollarship to study in Chandigarh for a semester starting next year, really hoping to get one too. Love from Mexico.

    • @thewatchman_returns
      @thewatchman_returns Год назад

      @@regulusmuphrid4891 clueless

    • @daizdamien1409
      @daizdamien1409 Год назад +1

      Damn nice brother 👍

    • @zhou_sei
      @zhou_sei Год назад

      @@thewatchman_returns ?

    • @Kraaven2026
      @Kraaven2026 Год назад

      This legend got a reply from an IITian, damn

  • @Strykenine
    @Strykenine Год назад +64

    I got my degree in bio almost 20 years ago, and I always thought that biology had a great deal to teach engineering students about design and efficiency. Evolution has had hundreds of millions of years to do the work, so it really isn't a surprise that really useful parts are highly conserved. At any rate, it sounds like you understand the subject better than I ever did, and it sounds like biology has a very bright future for research. I think we haven't even scratched the surface of what is possible.
    Subbed!

    • @Inertia888
      @Inertia888 Год назад +5

      When A.I. is asked to generate truss and frame structures, it is already coming out looking like bone and skeletal structures. I can only wonder what will be developed once quantum computing is being used effectively with generative design. Most of this is way over my head, but I am always fascinated.

    • @AdrianBoyko
      @AdrianBoyko Год назад +6

      Evolution writes what computer programmers call “Spaghetti code”. One reason why medical research is so difficult is that it’s difficult to read such bad code. If only there has been an intelligent designer…

    • @mistikmckk29
      @mistikmckk29 Год назад +5

      A thing cannot give rise to something if it does not contain it, or if it does not have the ability ( or the potential) to give rise to it.
      how on earth should deaf, blind, mindless atoms be able to create and recognise such complex logical relations?

    • @equim7363
      @equim7363 Год назад +1

      Evolution didn't do that. Evolution can only simplify mechanisms, and not increase complexity. This one is a very complex structure with determined functionality, as it was planned to be such way

    • @equim7363
      @equim7363 Год назад +2

      @@AdrianBoyko the spaghetti code doesn't mean it's not the most efficient and optimal. Which it is.

  • @fxshlein
    @fxshlein Год назад +21

    god i'm so glad the youtube algorithm just one day decided to bless me with your channel - amazing videos!

  • @liamlundergan2751
    @liamlundergan2751 Год назад +3

    I'm wrapping up a biochemistry degree, and my roommate has a degree in computer science, yet it wasn't until I found this channel that I figured out just how similar the two fields can be!

  • @Wander4P
    @Wander4P Год назад +6

    Since we've basically pushed silicon to it's limit, I have a feeling nano/biotech will be the new frontier of technology.

  • @mateusnicolinibezerra9757
    @mateusnicolinibezerra9757 Год назад +2

    What an awesome channel! Amazing animations and amazing potential, I’m glad to have found it. This is quality stuff.

  • @jasonqlwilliams
    @jasonqlwilliams Год назад +3

    Wow, I wasn't expecting such an in depth explanation.

  • @beloaded3736
    @beloaded3736 Год назад +10

    As a MSc in nanochemistry with organic, medicinal, biochem background, I can just say your channel is marvel.

  • @elevatorman7945
    @elevatorman7945 Год назад

    Dang, so cool. Thanks for making these videos so those of us not in biological chemistry can still appreciate these things.

  • @dominickdag1859
    @dominickdag1859 Год назад +10

    This vid is awesome. I’m doing my undergrad in cell bio and wish I had some classes that took this perspective on biology.

    • @W333L
      @W333L Год назад +1

      I recently completed my degree, this along with a few dozen other molecular mechanisms and their regulation was covered in intense biochemical and some biomechanical detail in “bacterial physiology” at my university. Look for something along those lines in your course catalog when you’re in your UD electives!

  • @flameendcyborgguy883
    @flameendcyborgguy883 Год назад +4

    As a biophysics student, I have one shortcut for how to handle Biological systems: Machines made out of Strings/Boiled Noodles.
    Most biological active substances are what is known as soft matter, and as such are both easy to change shape and require outside interference to keep some shape. Like bundled-up strings.
    Yet despite that, they still work somewhat like machines. They still can transform the electrical current to motion, transport stuff, reinforce, contract, cut, "Weld" etc.
    Biological systems are systems of soft machines, that can be changed easily by outside substances or other interfering forces.
    As such I fully support your language and more or less love your take on this quite complex topic.

  • @jay_sunday
    @jay_sunday Год назад +1

    Just discovered your channel and I love the 3B1B-style animations!

  • @BRAWLERR
    @BRAWLERR Месяц назад +1

    Danke, dass du mein Interesse an diesem Thema geweckt hast!

  • @jrkirby93
    @jrkirby93 Год назад +7

    Damn, 200$ for a book. Glad it's on libgen

  • @BLUYES422
    @BLUYES422 Год назад +5

    subbed! love to see some comprehensive biology videos

  • @jordanfarr3157
    @jordanfarr3157 Год назад +7

    FANTASTIC visualizations! I'm now subscribed and I expect that as soon as this falls into the 3Blue1Brown viewership cluster, this channel will take off. I recommend entering the summer of math video competitions he runs to get into that cluster (if you haven't already).

    • @Nanorooms
      @Nanorooms  Год назад +6

      I have entered that twice already haha

    • @jordanfarr3157
      @jordanfarr3157 Год назад +3

      @@Nanorooms oh fiddlesticks I apologize for not doing my cursory research on that. Well heck, you must be in the cluster! Algorithm brought me to you!

    • @lumotroph
      @lumotroph Год назад

      Keep going!

  • @casualbird7671
    @casualbird7671 Год назад +1

    It's quite a cool kind of engineering- where you try every single possible combination and the one that works gets to continue to exist

  • @sinfinite7516
    @sinfinite7516 Год назад

    Nice 🤌✌️ Looking forward to more biology videos.

  • @pukaseek
    @pukaseek Год назад

    As one who has electronic and programming experience, this was fascinating. What is more fascinating is that most “learned” people subscribe to this happening by accident, or, if you will, evolution. Even a cursory exploration of the human body displays an incredible “program” which is running inside each and every cell in our bodies.

  • @blakechang5573
    @blakechang5573 Год назад +52

    How are the 3-d biology models made? I’ve always wondered how such animations are created.

    • @Nanorooms
      @Nanorooms  Год назад +14

      Check the channel I linked in the desc!

  • @principal_optimism
    @principal_optimism Год назад +1

    This is phenomenal stuff!

  • @kronosol5779
    @kronosol5779 Год назад

    Woow! Thank you so much for this superb video!

  • @zakariaabderrahmanesadelao3048

    so thankful for this channel

  • @ruperterskin2117
    @ruperterskin2117 Год назад

    Right on. Thanks for sharing.

  • @jansenmtan
    @jansenmtan Год назад +1

    Great video! Beautiful!

  • @matthewdavidson2871
    @matthewdavidson2871 Год назад +1

    I love it... if only I culd comprehend this asom info!😵‍💫🤨

  • @blastback27
    @blastback27 Год назад

    Awesome video! amazing animation!

  • @Bizarro69
    @Bizarro69 Год назад

    I feel like the new RUclips policy will bring content like this to the top.

  • @cosmicwarriorx1
    @cosmicwarriorx1 3 месяца назад

    Great quality of video.

  • @haniamritdas4725
    @haniamritdas4725 Год назад +4

    Wow that's amazing! This is new to me, but the transition diagrams of the timing network remind me of the pattern of light absorption and emission from molecular electron valences. That math involves a "fine structure" constant which is proportional to the spacing of spectral lines of diffraction. This is how light can tell us the molecular composition of radiant masses.
    The value of the constant, about 1/137, would appear in the proportions of difference of the K values shown, if the same mathematical model is in play. A very different scale than the electromagnetic spectrum, but both are Lagrangian and the fine structure constant is a pure number without reference to scaling.
    It is truly fascinating that this is a biological timing circuit made of molecular components. The role that time plays in energy exchanges at any level of phenomenal scale is not the simplest form of algebra. I believe the correct term is "sesquilinear forms". But even physics has difficulties with that sort of equation, involving _both growth and decay functions_ in the evolution of energy transitions (which is everything from the maths point of view). Great food for thought. Many thanks.

    • @jordanfarr3157
      @jordanfarr3157 Год назад +1

      Leaving a comment so I can find yours again! I love when folks really give some deep insight even in the comments section. Thanks for sharing!

    • @haniamritdas4725
      @haniamritdas4725 Год назад +1

      @@jordanfarr3157 building neural links takes a cosmos ⚛️🙏🐒

    • @ToriKo_
      @ToriKo_ Год назад +1

      I enjoyed reading your comment. It was interesting when you expressed how that is relevant to ‘radiant masses’. It sounds like an important qualifier. What are radiant masses/could you help me understand what that phrase means?

    • @haniamritdas4725
      @haniamritdas4725 Год назад

      @@ToriKo_ I meant to distinguish between mass that is too cold to be seen in the dark, and what we can see through some sort of detector. All mass radiates energy in the form of heat and some degree of nuclear decay, but this is usually a tiny amount of energy. But this energy is always very specific in frequency levels, to the extent that the wavelengths of light that do radiate each indicate a precise configuration of the electron valence in the atom that released the photons of radiation. The spectrum also works as an absorption spectrum which will also indicate electron configurations, but then the light that is being used for detection must be "white light", light that spans the spectrum.
      But then there is the radiant mass which we know as the stars in the sky. These produce full spectrum radiation, white light, but when it is diffracted the lines of interference also reveal specific emission spectra indicating the atomic constituents of the star's mass.
      So I was thinking about how the new space telescope is able to detect chemicals in the atmosphere of distant planets: they take the diffraction spectrum of the radiant mass of the star, and then look at that light through the atmosphere of the planet as it passes on front of the star. Whatever lines have been absorbed by the atmosphere indicate the presence of different chemical elements on the planet.
      Sorry if this is unclear. Radiant mass is hot enough to glow... 🤓

  • @nonfictionshow
    @nonfictionshow Год назад +3

    I’d love if you could make a video to explain the proton pumps and respiratory chain of mitochondria!

  • @BartdeBoisblanc
    @BartdeBoisblanc Год назад

    7:15 to 8:30 this diagram and description have a eerie similarity to an analog circuit timer known a 555. This timer has a circuit called Schmitt trigger. It only changes state after a certain level is reached and does not go back to the other state until the opposite threshold is passed.

  • @programmierlab7358
    @programmierlab7358 Год назад

    Great Video, thank you for your effort! I was wondering if you mixed up K1' and K2' for the disassembly part of the flagella, since intuitively, I would assume that the disassembly of flagella is reversed to the assembly of flagella. So that the machinery first stops producing the hook and cap, then the rings, then the rods and then the rest. This would correspond to an order of K2' > K1' or in extended case: K'cap > K'ring> K' rods > K' stator > K' apparatus. Its a pleasure to watch your videos!

  • @unusualfabrication9937
    @unusualfabrication9937 Год назад +1

    absolutely LOVE this series! it really exposes the true beautiful clockwork systems of biology in a way the memorization cannot

  • @sivajanumm
    @sivajanumm Год назад

    I have witnessed something beautiful

  • @luisborroel6052
    @luisborroel6052 Год назад +11

    Love your videos Bro, stay scientific

  • @nurkleblurker2482
    @nurkleblurker2482 Год назад

    Damn underrated channel

  • @denishclarke4470
    @denishclarke4470 Год назад +2

    I am currently studying ML and DL
    Is it better to go on computational neuroscience field?
    Help me direct my path

  • @WaveFlux
    @WaveFlux Год назад

    amazing video!

  • @aniketnarayan6767
    @aniketnarayan6767 6 месяцев назад

    Can you do a booklist for more in depth knowledge about this field

  • @doommusic4738
    @doommusic4738 Год назад

    Very intresting biology

  • @psychpile
    @psychpile Год назад

    just an outsiders view, I think it would be nice to get inticed to learn the math and logic with some more "visualization" dotted throughout the later half. Very well done in the beginning but I felt like it was a teaser for graphics that werent delivered at atleast some kind of climax.
    Hope this is well recieved by you. Have a good one and dont stop.

  • @JoelRausch
    @JoelRausch Год назад +1

    These are amazing! But please number the video titles so we know what order we're supposed to watch them in...

  • @meneeRubieko
    @meneeRubieko Год назад

    Nice viideo man! How did you make those DNA animations?

  • @m9bettt
    @m9bettt Год назад

    If this video is showing a mathematical example of signaling cascade, how would someone augment this for an analog circuit for computational purposes?

  • @casualbeluga2724
    @casualbeluga2724 Год назад +1

    great video

  • @SC-zq6cu
    @SC-zq6cu Год назад +1

    Biology right now is going through the same phase physics was going through when thermodynamics was invented.

  • @kayakMike1000
    @kayakMike1000 Год назад

    Well... how does a cell NOT create flagella after it already created one? Is the DNA marked somehow?

  • @c_1947
    @c_1947 Год назад

    How do you make animations

  • @nelsonlabrada
    @nelsonlabrada Год назад

    outstanding

  • @mohdil123
    @mohdil123 Год назад

    I love this

  • @williammorris1763
    @williammorris1763 Год назад

    it is computation. having a narrow view of what that word means leads to any conclusion otherwise. no different than a mechanical clockwork computer.

  • @hamishfraser2004
    @hamishfraser2004 Год назад +1

    I don't understand any of the maths, yet still a fascinating video for me nonetheless.

  • @blu12gaming44
    @blu12gaming44 Год назад

    The latter half of the video looks somewhat similar to an ADSR synthesizer envelope. Perhaps the analog circuitry behind that tech shares similar mathematics.

  • @dadsonworldwide3238
    @dadsonworldwide3238 Год назад

    Industrial Revolution mindset was obbsesed with consumption and materials so with that paradolia of the mind thsy establish the theory names and explanation In biology to begin with.
    The best explanation is idealistic like code , blue print , program, but of course it a dualism to matter with more hardware and mechanics.

  • @Kradrice
    @Kradrice Год назад

    Let’s go prompt my goat

  • @DimensionPicturesAOT
    @DimensionPicturesAOT Год назад

    This is the missing link.

  • @Gelatinocyte2
    @Gelatinocyte2 Месяц назад

    0:02 wait a minute... That's an animation error! The stators shouldn't be rotating along with the rotor (the white rings on the inner membrane and in the cell wall should be static).

  • @annunzarizzle
    @annunzarizzle Год назад +2

    what program do you use for animations and moving around equations so fluidly?

    • @Nanorooms
      @Nanorooms  Год назад +1

      All in the description

    • @annunzarizzle
      @annunzarizzle Год назад +1

      @@Nanorooms oh cool its python, seems like quite a bit of code to get this done, I'm genuinely curious how do you have time for this and how did you manage to learn all of this are you are computational biologist a magician an alien?

    • @Nanorooms
      @Nanorooms  Год назад +1

      I am a mere mortal undergrad hahaha. I did use a bit of keynote to compose the more trivial movements tho. But still, it’s just a lot of tricky work life balance maneuvers to be able to make time for this stuff.

    • @annunzarizzle
      @annunzarizzle Год назад +3

      @@Nanorooms Well its fucking impressive, I've been an organic chemist for about 10 years and I'm learning a lot from your videos so thanks.

  • @Dostyy
    @Dostyy Год назад

    Where is the mechanism

  • @eruveau
    @eruveau Год назад

    Crunchy roll 😮

  • @jhonaorz7308
    @jhonaorz7308 7 месяцев назад

    What profession have you studied to know that? I would like to learn

    • @linuscracktips4986
      @linuscracktips4986 3 месяца назад +1

      I don't know for sure, but my guesses would be
      Biochemical/Bioengineering or Bioinformatics

  • @pyropulseIXXI
    @pyropulseIXXI Год назад +1

    Cells are literally machines though. Their complexity dwarfs anything a human could construct, or even imagine, but they are physical and are thus machines.

  • @OfficialGOD
    @OfficialGOD Год назад

    While it may seem that certain processes follow a set pattern, the reality is that there is a high level of chaos and randomness at play.

  • @physicsbystanprisajny6284
    @physicsbystanprisajny6284 Год назад

    Paper and pencil still biology?

  • @ToriKo_
    @ToriKo_ Год назад +1

    At around 10:30 you didn’t tell us how K’1 and K’2 correlate to the building of different parts of the flagellum that need to be built in order relative to each other. That is the assumption I made to make sense of the video after watching that section a few times. This is a really cool video but I feel you could have improved the communication around that part

    • @ToriKo_
      @ToriKo_ Год назад

      Also the beginning disclaimer was great I though

  • @armandaneshjoo
    @armandaneshjoo Год назад +6

    Felt like you brought up the mind-blowing, rule-bending, soul-mending, faith-breaking, future-making nano-engine, then forgot about it and got distracted by math. This could be much better if you showed the motor or the cell with the charts, and what happens to them, in real time. I specialize in automatic control, but couldn't make the connection and didn't understand a thing. I love your channel though.

    • @ToriKo_
      @ToriKo_ Год назад +1

      Great articulation

  • @nasim3269
    @nasim3269 Год назад

    Do uou imagine that in the future we may make biological devices instead of electrical or mechanical ones?

  • @madtscientist8853
    @madtscientist8853 Год назад +1

    My brain hurts. But that is a good thing. Means I'm learning something

  • @Suitswonderland
    @Suitswonderland Год назад +2

    You nerds can keep your maths out of my bio chem!

  • @monsieurLDN
    @monsieurLDN Год назад +4

    These videos would be much more educational if I understood mathematics more intuitively :'(

  • @abranlincoln
    @abranlincoln Год назад

    2:44 I fell on this and I'm at computer cience college now. Totally works and worth🤣

  • @mahtoosacks
    @mahtoosacks Год назад

    Social anxiety created the flagellum, and i felt that.

    • @Nanorooms
      @Nanorooms  Год назад +1

      Top comment of the video

  • @lowkey213
    @lowkey213 Год назад

    They had nano tech patents since the 80’s. Of motors consisting of less then 10 arrows. And all kinds of crazy things. Imagine where we really are at.

  • @ingemar_von_zweigbergk
    @ingemar_von_zweigbergk Год назад

    my point is to use these types of components to create nano machine cybernetics

  • @noahwilliams8996
    @noahwilliams8996 Год назад

    Yes, cells are machines (at least according to machine theory).

  • @tennicksalvarez9079
    @tennicksalvarez9079 Год назад

    Hold up the filgela spins?!?!

  • @myperspective5091
    @myperspective5091 Год назад

    👍🙂👍

  • @Luxcium
    @Luxcium 3 месяца назад

    So ChatGPT says all the time that it is not like Biological stuff is because it is a machine and today I got the revers disclaimer haha

  • @MasamuneX
    @MasamuneX Год назад +1

    new gnosis just dropped!!!

  • @GordonMusliman
    @GordonMusliman Год назад

    just wait until people realize core mechanism of production of energy is through a generator-like mechanism in mitochondria.

  • @shinymew1213
    @shinymew1213 Год назад +1

    maybe this is why modifying humans is so fucking hard, all of space and time has convened for us to exist as we are and for us to get better means understanding all this shit and thats REALLY fucking complicated. FUCK, i just wana fly naked man, why do i have to be bound by bullshit like gravity and physics

  • @Faesharlyn
    @Faesharlyn Год назад

    I legit thought this was a crochet pattern trying to load..

  • @arielhernandez1638
    @arielhernandez1638 Год назад

    I disagree with the idea cells aren't that computer-y. The mathematical side of computer science is VERY relevant to biology. The two fields of study are not just related by analogy or coincidence; they are actually related.

  • @hampopper3150
    @hampopper3150 Год назад

    lifeforms are machines they are just different from our current machines.

  • @vitalyvitaly5335
    @vitalyvitaly5335 Год назад

    . . ТЕБЕ ЩАСТЯ , ВАМ ЩАСТЯ , ЇМ ЩАСТЯ , МЕНІ ЩАСТЯ . . .
    . . ТЕБЕ СЧАСТЬЯ , ВАМ СЧАСТЬЯ , ИМ СЧАСТЬЯ , МНЕ СЧАСТЬЯ . . .
    . . HAPPINESS TO YOU , HAPPINESS TO YOU , HAPPINESS TO THEM , HAPPINESS TO ME . . .

  • @jonathanpenduka7420
    @jonathanpenduka7420 Год назад +8

    I cant believe such complex mechanism just "evolved"... logic doesn't just evolve

    • @williamm8069
      @williamm8069 Год назад

      Intelligent design advocates embrace this logic but Richard Dawkins somehow explains this as well. Maybe it is a hybrid of evolution and a consciousness that can make modifications as needed similar to epigenetics adapting to environmental challenges.

    • @cadenelson891
      @cadenelson891 3 месяца назад

      Says the person who comes from a long lineage of evolved organisms lol

    • @jonathanpenduka7420
      @jonathanpenduka7420 3 месяца назад

      @@williamm8069you’re getting closer to the truth

    • @jonathanpenduka7420
      @jonathanpenduka7420 3 месяца назад

      @@cadenelson891 no proof

  • @SomeCollege
    @SomeCollege Год назад

    It is a machine because it was designed to be a machine.

  • @joonasmakinen4807
    @joonasmakinen4807 Год назад +1

    Superb quality animations and math explantions, thanks for your hard work! There is only one major logical problem though, which is possibly subconcious. Here and there you were rightfully amazed by the seen nanoengineering, but on multiple occasions you gave glory to Nature. Why is that? What would you say to me if we both saw the engineering of a laptop or a phone or a airplane, and I would say absolutely no intelligence was behind them? Or, if we both saw the beauty of Mona Lisa painting, and I would say the same? Wouldn’t you say to me ”Nonsense!” or ”Impossible!” or ”Illogical”, and even prove to me with many examples that I’m being irrational. Now, when we awe before the technologically superior nanoengineering of life, then could you please pause for a moment and give all that glory to Creator. Consider these words, and start making your videos to glorify Father God, and you will see your life transform! Who is Father God? He is the One revealed by Son of God, Jesus = Yeshua of Christianity nearly 2000 years ago.
    For more answers about Abiogenesis and Origin of Life, see Prof. Dr. James M. Tour’s channel: DrJamesTour. He is a synthetic chemist and has over 700 publications with over 100000 citations and is openly debating about these matters, proving from the first principles that scientifically we have no clue how life got started!

    • @Mulmgott
      @Mulmgott Год назад

      Calling it "God" or "laws of nature" is a just a difference in semantics as long as you don't strictly believe in a fictional book. I don't believe there is a "creator" but rather a set of rules that were there for eternity as far as we know. I mean most definitions of God also claim that he was there for eternity so there really is no difference. The word God has a less neutral and more negative connotation to me though since no people were killed for the laws of physics but rather the belief in a certain iteration of God. People are free to call it nature or god or whatsoever and nobody should be pushed to word it in a certain way.

    • @zhou_sei
      @zhou_sei Год назад +1

      as soon as you can provide me with a designed universe that we can analyze and know FOR SURE it's a designed universe, THEN we can compare OUR universe and see if it's designed.
      we know the mona lisa was painted, and by whom... to within a pretty high degree of certainty.

    • @joonasmakinen4807
      @joonasmakinen4807 Год назад

      @@MulmgottWhy not use Father God, revealed by Son of God? Judge the use of God’s name based on the original author, Jesus, not by the hypocrites that tried to use it for their personal gain… Bible is not a fictional book, for far too many historical reasons. Lee Strobel’s ”The Case for Christ” book summarizes those rather well. The key is that it is a historical library of books written by many eyewitnesses of what was Father God’s plan to save humanity from death and how he did it in Son of God, Jesus. It also reveals Jesus as Logos, who holds all things together. Here ”holds” is an active verb. Therefore, I would ask WHO is the so called laws of nature?

    • @joonasmakinen4807
      @joonasmakinen4807 Год назад

      @@zhou_sei First, are you aware that universe (Latin root) literally means ”all things, everybody, all people, the whole world”? It does not make logical sense to ask me to show you another universe, because there is no other universe by definition.
      Second, why don’t you look at things you can already see, instead of focusing on all things, which only God can do? Why do you require impossible top-down analysis, which even you can’t do yourself, when we all can already do bottom-up analysis?
      The video was about life’s nanoengineering, of which design is a thing we can already assess with our reasoning based on the experimental evidence about how chemistry and physics work in the laboratory and what human creativity is capable of in the everyday life. We have overwhelming evidenve that it requires human intelligence to organize non-organic matter into an iPhone with all of its pre-programmed micro- and nanodevices. We have overwhelming evidence that it requires human creativity to organize color pigments on canvas into a masterpiece like Mona Lisa. Don’t you realize that humans are creators, or, to make it clear, images of Creator? The sufficient evidence has already been given to us… Would you be willing to admit this?

    • @joonasmakinen4807
      @joonasmakinen4807 Год назад

      In conclusion, if we have courage to follow the evidence, then we must admit ”science” of abiogenesis is a fairytale or a fictional story with no basis in the known reality. Still today it has zero empirical evidence as support, yet it is falsely hyped by media and religiously defended by ”scientists”, so badly that real scientists are shut off from challenging the narrative. If you dare, then see DrJamesTour channel for what chemistry without outside intelligence is actually capable of! If you dare, then also see Sky Scholar dismantle Standard Cosmology as well. If you dare, then also see Unzicker’s Real Physics dismantle Standard Physics as well. I could go on and on…

  • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
    @Embassy_of_Jupiter Год назад +2

    My brain just expanded tenfold

  • @user-nx7xx7rf1h
    @user-nx7xx7rf1h Год назад

    and most evolutionists say there's no any Intelligent Design?

  • @overlyfatman9722
    @overlyfatman9722 Год назад +1

    You lost me at 5:32

  • @spugged9800
    @spugged9800 Год назад

    I thought that was a computer generated jet engine

  • @zalzalahbuttsaab
    @zalzalahbuttsaab Год назад +3

    Yeah... it came about by chance.

    • @special_stardust
      @special_stardust Год назад +4

      Haha, it’s kind of a treat seeing scientists praising the Intelligent Designer for His wisdom, while also denying His very existence.

    • @zalzalahbuttsaab
      @zalzalahbuttsaab Год назад +1

      @@special_stardust It seems their methodology is: if I can't see who did it, then nobody did it.

    • @zhou_sei
      @zhou_sei Год назад +2

      and also by natural selection.
      as soon as there's good evidence for a creator, we can accept your superstitious claims.

    • @special_stardust
      @special_stardust Год назад +1

      @@zhou_sei this video uses engineering and design as an analogy for cellular functions because their precise, orderly, and timed, as if someone had ‘designed’ them. In this case, I think the burden of proof is on the evolutionist, that somehow a highly ordered system could arise from disorder, and information arise from nothing.

    • @zhou_sei
      @zhou_sei Год назад +3

      @@special_stardust the burden of proof for evolution/ common descent has been met bajillions of times over;
      the mountain of good evidence will be QUITE the task to overcome for the MOST intrepid creationist.
      "seeming" designed is not the same as "being" designed.

  • @minhcao4898
    @minhcao4898 Год назад

    Atp synthase look like two stroke engine

  • @Democratic_Industrialism
    @Democratic_Industrialism Год назад

    This engine will power the worlds smallest car for the ant man

  • @Freddisred
    @Freddisred Год назад +1

    We are dust in space given an incomprehensibly long amount of time to reform, indefinitely. There is, seemingly, nothing else required, and that is beautiful to me.

  • @SamuelOrjiM
    @SamuelOrjiM Год назад

    If you're ever interested in multicellular to multi-agent scheduling algorithms look for me, cellular hiveminds are begging for integration with agent hiveminds, I think the feedback loops could stop species extinction and climate change if the cycle of restoration and degradation of the environment are taken into account.