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ID the Future Intelligent Design, Evolution, and Science Podcast
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Jonathan Bartlett on the Growing Evidence of Designed Mutations

Episode
1719
With
Jonathan McLatchie
Guest
Jonathan Bartlett
Duration
00:25:14
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Audio File (14.9 mb)
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On today’s ID the Future, host and evolutionary biologist Jonathan McLatchie sits down with software R&D engineer Jonathan Bartlett to discuss Bartlett’s work on the question of when genetic mutations are random versus directed. Bartlett explains that the issue isn’t an all-or-nothing affair. Often a given biological system dramatically limits the search space of possible mutations in useful ways, and then within that much more limited set of possible mutations, random processes are at play. He gives the example of antibody mutations. He argues that many biological systems show considerable evidence of having been beneficially designed for directed mutations. Why, then, are many mutations deleterious? He also has an answer for that. Tune in to learn more.

Bartlett’s two peer-reviewed papers mentioned in this podcast are here and here. If you want to further benefit from Bartlett’s knack for making complex ideas accessible, check out his videos at the Blyth Institute.

Jonathan Bartlett

Senior Fellow, Walter Bradley Center for Natural & Artificial Intelligence
Jonathan Bartlett is a senior software R&D engineer at Specialized Bicycle Components, where he focuses on solving problems that span multiple software teams. Previously he was a senior developer at ITX, where he developed applications for companies across the US. He also offers his time as the Director of The Blyth Institute, focusing on the interplay between mathematics, philosophy, engineering, and science. Jonathan is the author of several textbooks and edited volumes which have been used by universities as diverse as Princeton and DeVry.