Why Darwin was Right: The 222nd Evolutionary Lens with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying
Apr 24, 2024
01:28:44
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PhD biologists Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying dissect evolution through an evolutionary lens. They debate beliefs vs social standing, discuss chimeric coronaviruses funded by Fauci, and explore sex-biased gene expression. Sponsors include Listening.com, Maui Nui Venison, and Sundays dog food. Join their Locals for exclusive content and discussions.
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Quick takeaways
Beliefs are shaped by personal experiences and social pressures, leading to divergent belief structures.
Academic integrity is compromised by financial interests, hindering the pursuit of knowledge and societal progress.
Research reveals complex sex-biased gene expression across different anatomical systems, challenging simplistic gender transition narratives.
Deep dives
The Impact of Genetic Discoveries on Evolutionary Theory
Genetic discoveries like Mendel's work and the structure of DNA have fundamentally transformed our understanding of evolution. Darwinism, while lacking specifics about DNA, remains a robust framework, but newer discoveries challenge certain aspects of how genetic information translates into morphological form.
Challenges to the Mechanistic Basis of Darwinism
The central dogma of molecular biology, emphasizing the role of DNA in encoding information for protein synthesis, has led to significant progress but falls short in explaining complex morphological transformations like the evolution of wings from legs. The hunt for where heritable information is stored and in what language is ongoing, pointing to potential missing layers in our understanding.
The Influence of Social Dynamics on Belief Systems
Belief systems are influenced by social pressures and personal consequences, leading to divergent types of belief structures. A distinction is made between beliefs based on personal experiences and those shaped by social norms and authority figures, highlighting the complexity of how individuals form and maintain beliefs.
The Erosion of Intellectual Integrity in Academic Institutions
Academic institutions are increasingly influenced by financial interests, resembling the indulgences of the past. This compromises the intellectual rigor in various fields, leading to the stifling of perspectives that may challenge established narratives. The erosion of academic integrity poses a threat to the pursuit of knowledge and the advancement of society.
The Indulgence of Injecting Aluminum in Babies
The discussion delves into the safety considerations of injecting aluminum into babies and how the perceived settled science may not be accurately portraying the debate. The podcast highlights the existence of dual kinds of consensus – one resulting from vigorous debate and resolution, such as Darwinism, and the other imposed to avoid disagreement. It emphasizes the influence of moneyed interests steering narratives in fields like climate science and vaccines, inhibiting open discussion and critical inquiry.
Complexities of Sex-Biased Gene Expression Across Species
The episode also explores sex-biased gene expression across mammals and a bird, revealing intricate patterns of differential gene expression related to sexual maturity and lifespan. The research uncovers varying degrees of sex-biased gene expression in brain, cerebellum, heart, kidney, and liver, challenging simplistic views on gender transitions. The complexity observed highlights the limitations of altering biological sex characteristics and emphasizes the nuanced nature of genetic expression differences between males and females.
In this 222nd in a series of live discussions with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying (both PhDs in Biology), we talk about the state of the world through an evolutionary lens.
In this episode, we discuss evolution, and how we know that it is true. We discuss the different kinds of beliefs that people have—beliefs that attempt to reconcile with reality, vs beliefs that reconcile with social standing and comfort. If your beliefs put you on the outs with your friends, do you change your beliefs, or your friends? Are you willing to give up the cocktail party for reality? We also discuss research published in 2000 and funded by Fauci’s NIAID, which demonstrated that it was possible to make chimeric coronaviruses, swapping the spike protein from one to a different species entirely. Finally: sex-biased gene expression, in which genes are expressed differently in the two sexes, in anatomical systems as varied as brain, kidneys, and liver. *****
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Mentioned in this episode:
Kennedy 2023. The Wuhan Cover-Up and the Terrifying Bio-Weapons Arms Race: https://www.skyhorsepublishing.com/9781510773981/the-wuhan-cover-up/
Kuo et al 2000. Retargeting of coronavirus by substitution of the spike glycoprotein ectodomain: crossing the host cell species barrier. Journal of virology, 74(3):1393-1406: https://journals.asm.org/doi/full/10.1128/jvi.74.3.1393-1406.2000
Rodríguez-Montes et al 2023. Sex-biased gene expression across mammalian organ development and evolution. Science 382(6670), p.eadf1046: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adf1046