Thursday 3 December 2020

The complexity of devising and maintaining function of computer engineers

 I observed earlier today, noting a new recognition for the recent book The Mystery of Life’s Origin, that 2020 is not going to go down in history as the Year of the Expert. Of course, I didn’t mean to run down experts or expertise in general. But sometimes you get a situation where experts with crucial insights simply haven’t been invited to the conversation about a particular question. 

When it comes to the origin of biological wonders, a couple of examples might be doctors and engineers, including computer engineers. Unlike evolutionary biologists, members of these professions succeed or fail based on their ability to keep things working, or in the case of engineers, their ability to design functional things from the ground up. They know exactly what goes into operation, in a way that evolutionary biologists don’t. 

The complexity of devising and maintaining function is a consideration that bears, obviously, on the origin of life itself. Two contributors to the Mystery book are synthetic organic chemist James Tour at Rice University and physicist Brian Miller at Discovery Institute. We’re in for a treat this Friday, December computer engineer vs computer science Eastern, when Dr. Tour and Dr. Miller discuss “Thermodynamics and Origin of Life” for Professor Tour’s Science & Faith podcast. Look for it here:

No comments:

Post a Comment

Worldwide ability is rotating north to Canada

 Those were the expressions of Shopify CEO Tobias Lutke in a tweet tending to gifted ability that are as of now kept from working in the U.S...