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An Ordered Case for Design | Life on K2-18b Revisited

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Manage episode 481166017 series 3610313
Content provided by Reasons to Believe. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Reasons to Believe or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Join biochemist Fazale “Fuz” Rana and astrophysicist Hugh Ross as they discuss new discoveries with theological and philosophical implications that point to the reality of God’s existence.

A team of German researchers discovered that genes located in bacterial chromosomes assume a precise order based on their function. Biochemist Fuz Rana explains why this discovery evinces a Creator’s role in the origin and design of life.

Astrophysicist Hugh Ross comments on how the internet has blown up with blogs announcing astronomers have discovered signs of life on a distant planet called K2-18b. The reason for the excitement stems from a 99.7% probable detection of a molecule, dimethyl sulfide, in the planet’s atmosphere that might have been generated by living things. As an example, all of Earth’s dimethyl sulfide comes from marine microbes. However, several factors have been overlooked amidst the optimism: (1) Astronomers have found dimethyl sulfide in a comet and in the interstellar medium that’s indisputably nonbiological, (2) Astronomers question the detection, and (3) This distant planet and its host star’s physical characteristics rule out any possibility of physical life.

Links and Resources:

Most Bacterial Gene Families Are Biased Toward Specific Chromosomal Positions

New Constraints on DMS and DMDS in the Atmosphere of K2-18b from JWST MIRI

Signs of Life on a Distant Planet? Not So Fast, Say These Astronomers

On the Abiotic Origin of Dimethyl Sulfide: Discovery of Dimethyl Sulfide in the Interstellar Medium

Evidence for Abiotic Dimethyl Sulfide in Cometary Matter

A Comprehensive Reanalysis of K2-18b’s JWST NIRISS+NIRSpec Transmission Spectrum

Designed to the Core (chapters 9–11)

  continue reading

100 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 481166017 series 3610313
Content provided by Reasons to Believe. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Reasons to Believe or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Join biochemist Fazale “Fuz” Rana and astrophysicist Hugh Ross as they discuss new discoveries with theological and philosophical implications that point to the reality of God’s existence.

A team of German researchers discovered that genes located in bacterial chromosomes assume a precise order based on their function. Biochemist Fuz Rana explains why this discovery evinces a Creator’s role in the origin and design of life.

Astrophysicist Hugh Ross comments on how the internet has blown up with blogs announcing astronomers have discovered signs of life on a distant planet called K2-18b. The reason for the excitement stems from a 99.7% probable detection of a molecule, dimethyl sulfide, in the planet’s atmosphere that might have been generated by living things. As an example, all of Earth’s dimethyl sulfide comes from marine microbes. However, several factors have been overlooked amidst the optimism: (1) Astronomers have found dimethyl sulfide in a comet and in the interstellar medium that’s indisputably nonbiological, (2) Astronomers question the detection, and (3) This distant planet and its host star’s physical characteristics rule out any possibility of physical life.

Links and Resources:

Most Bacterial Gene Families Are Biased Toward Specific Chromosomal Positions

New Constraints on DMS and DMDS in the Atmosphere of K2-18b from JWST MIRI

Signs of Life on a Distant Planet? Not So Fast, Say These Astronomers

On the Abiotic Origin of Dimethyl Sulfide: Discovery of Dimethyl Sulfide in the Interstellar Medium

Evidence for Abiotic Dimethyl Sulfide in Cometary Matter

A Comprehensive Reanalysis of K2-18b’s JWST NIRISS+NIRSpec Transmission Spectrum

Designed to the Core (chapters 9–11)

  continue reading

100 episodes

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