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Porcupine Quills and Other Examples of Nature’s Foresight
Evolution News ^ | August 23, 2018 | Geoffrey Simmons

Posted on 08/29/2018 10:24:41 AM PDT by Heartlander

Porcupine Quills and Other Examples of Nature’s Foresight

Geoffrey Simmons

Editor’s note: We are delighted to offer the recently launched series “Modernizing Darwin,” cross-posted at Shabbat.com, by Geoffrey Simmons, MD. Dr. Simmons is the author of What Darwin Didn’t Know and Billions of Missing Links. He is a Fellow with Discovery Institute’s Center for Science & Culture.

The average porcupine has 30,000 needle-sharp quills, each with 800 barbs at the tip. Usually, these miniature spears lie flat along the back, sides, and tail of the animal. But if it’s attacked, they suddenly leap up for defense. The quills aren’t thrown, despite popular ideas on that score. An attacker, such as a dog, badger, or fox, can easily get a very painful snout full. Each quill only requires half the strength of a hypodermic needle for insertion and that isn’t much. Yet a newborn porcupine passes through its mother’s birth canal without causing her any injuries. How?

The answer, of course, is that the quills are soft. They stiffen a few hours after delivery. Otherwise, there would never have been another generation of porcupines. Is this designed with foresight? It definitely seems so. This could not have happened by natural selection or trial and error.

Horse Foals and Giraffe Calves

In a similar fashion, horse foals and giraffe calves are born with temporary, gelatinous coverings on their razor-sharp hooves. The pangolin or scaly anteaters of Africa and Southeast Asia have razor-sharp scales covering their entire body. These are not like reptile or fish scales, but made of the same material as claws. Nonetheless, they are born with soft scales that rapidly harden when exposed to air. Is this a lucky accident (for the mom)?

How does it happen that hardening of quills, hooves, and scales is delayed until after birth? If that trait wasn’t present from the beginning, there would have been either no hard quills or hooves, or no live births. Nature doesn’t get to experiment if the trait is essential from the beginning.

Take the bat. It has long leg muscles that insert in its upper torso, so that when it lands (upside down) the weight of the hanging torso quickly pulls the talons closed. One might also admire the planning that has them spinning vertically to defecate/urinate. All the while staying quite clean.

Humans are loaded with evidence of foresight. Some of our teeth are adapted for grinding and some for biting. Each person’s mouth is unique, such that we use dental records in crime investigations. Yet the top and bottom teeth fit together, despite having grown separately. If you’ve ever had a crown you know it’s painful if they don’t fit.

We are also able to construct collateral circulation (new blood vessels) where blood vessels have been blocked, as in a heart attack. Oftentimes, injured nerves can regenerate. The body re-uses factors present in development to aid in healing.

In a range of what I call what if/what then plans, all suggestive of foresight, we have reflexes designed to protect us. We sneeze to get rid of irritants in our nose, cough to clear our throat or lung passages, hiccough to dislodge food in our esophagus, vomit to get rid of toxic material in our stomach, and create diarrhea to eliminate a variety of irritants and infectious agents. If we touch something burning hot, we quickly pull away. If there’s a glare, we squint. If we’re cut, we clot off the wound.

The Most Impressive Display

Perhaps the most impressive display of foresight is the timing of a human baby’s first breath. If a newborn takes that breath while in the birth canal (too soon), she suffocates. If the breath is taken too late, she dies of hypoxia. The assumption is that the sudden change in environment and/or temperature triggers that breath. Also, a major blood vessel near the heart (the ductus arteriosus), which shunts blood past the lungs in utero, simultaneously closes so blood can now pick up oxygen in the lungs. Beforehand, the lungs were filled with amniotic fluid.

Then, is it a coincidence, natural selection, or design that a mother’s milk has large volumes of water and the exact nutrients, vitamins, salts, and antibodies the baby needs? Could this milk have come about by trial and error until our ancestors got it right? It would be too bad for babies if mutation and selection had to try formulas for a few hundred thousand years. Not likely. And then there is the milk delivery system. It has to be ready when the baby is born. That process starts nine months before.

In fact, for successful reproduction of a mammal like us, these things are required: lactation (multicomponent), placental development (not simple), the uterus (a highly specialized structure), hormonal control (also multicomponent), the birth process as described above, including the first breath and all that takes, and egg and sperm, which require their own production and delivery systems. To develop such a complex interacting system without foresight would be impossible.

Constructive questions and courteous comments will be appreciated.



TOPICS: Education; Reference; Science
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 08/29/2018 10:24:41 AM PDT by Heartlander
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To: Heartlander

Great article. Thanks for posting. My son (as most parents probably think) is perfect. Physically and mentally...somehow. If that’s not a miracle, there is no such thing!


2 posted on 08/29/2018 10:37:03 AM PDT by gr8eman (Since God has been banished from our classrooms, Satan has filled the void.)
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To: Heartlander

Ping


3 posted on 08/29/2018 10:39:23 AM PDT by Parmy
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To: Heartlander

4 posted on 08/29/2018 10:41:13 AM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Heartlander

You either believe that Life on Earth is just a Coincidence or it’s due to Divine Intervention. I’ll go with Door #2.


5 posted on 08/29/2018 10:44:37 AM PDT by Kickass Conservative (The way Liberals carry on about Deportation, you would think "Mexico" was Spanish for "Auschwitz".)
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To: Heartlander

Gee.

“Mother Nature’s foresight”.

Seems like a single Intelligent Designer rather than “ten trillion individual simultaneous accidental randoms acts of individual useful mutations that randomly combined to provide an absolutely necessary function to some future lifeform mutation ... that hasn’t happened yet either.”


6 posted on 08/29/2018 10:46:40 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (The democrats' national goal: One world social-communism under one world religion: Atheistic Islam.)
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To: Heartlander

In the beginning, GOD created.....

To we who have eyes to see, EVERYTHING points to this.


7 posted on 08/29/2018 10:46:52 AM PDT by fredhead (Duty, Honor, Country.....Honor, Courage, Commitment)
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To: Heartlander

bkmk


8 posted on 08/29/2018 11:41:27 AM PDT by Sergio (An object at rest cannot be stopped! - The Evil Midnight Bomber What Bombs at Midnight)
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To: Heartlander

They should start A Hair Club for Women so some of these MeToo’ers can get quills transplanted to their Nether Region and solve their problems for good.


9 posted on 08/29/2018 11:44:32 AM PDT by ImJustAnotherOkie (All I know is what I read in the papers.)
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To: Heartlander

Our seriously dumb chow chow dog thought porcupines would taste good.

He got a mouthful of quills instead.


10 posted on 08/29/2018 11:56:54 AM PDT by cgbg (Hidden behind the social justice warrior mask is corruption and sexual deviance.)
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To: Heartlander

Gotta love the elegant beauty of nature...


11 posted on 08/29/2018 12:15:43 PM PDT by Boomer
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To: Heartlander

Look up “Drew Berry: Animations of Unseeable biology” on YouTube


12 posted on 08/29/2018 12:36:59 PM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: Heartlander

I have owned horses for over 33 years & have bred & foaled 6 foals.

RAZOR sharp hooves is bit of overstatement.

The foal is encased in the placenta, also, and that sac needs to be broken open ASAP when the foal is emerging from the mare. Otherwise, it bay suffocate.

The entire placenta also needs to be spread out to make sure it all dischrged from the mare.

IF if hangs there for any length of time ____DO NOT PULL on it.

Get a bath towel, soak it & tie it with twine to the hanging placenta & the weight of that soaked towel will GENTLY pull the placenta out in one piece.

All it will cost you is the sacrifice of an old towel to the foaling/placenta Gods.

Been there——Done that.......4 fillies & 2 stud colts.


13 posted on 08/29/2018 3:09:19 PM PDT by ridesthemiles
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To: Heartlander

Excellent article


14 posted on 08/29/2018 3:37:13 PM PDT by plain talk
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