29 June 2026

Accidental discovery of the ultra finestructure of the web of the Garden Cross Spider

Kruisspin / Garden Cross Spider / Araneus diadematus ©GK

Yesterday my attention was drawn by an orange coloured spider illuminated by the sun. I was forced to underexpose the photo by 2 stops to get the right exposure of the spider. It appeared to be the common Garden Cross Spider (Kruisspin). But what surprised me was the thread of the web:



Here is a detail of the thread (divided in two parts for a better view of the details). A remarkable pattern of very fine stripes with all the colours of the rainbow emerged. I've never seen such a pattern. I expected a continuous thread. Why in heaven's name this very detailed structure? What is going on? How does the spider manage to create this pattern? And what is its function (if it has a function at all)?

I was lucky. First, the sun must illuminate the web at the right angle to make the thread and the pattern visible. Spider webs are supposed to be invisible to be effective! In the shadow, you see absolutely nothing. Secondly, I underexposed the photo to get the spider right. As a side effect the pattern appeared. I almost never underexpose a photo. Thirdly, I was lucky there was no annoying wind that could move the web. Wind makes macrophotography impossible. Above that, it was a clean and fresh web in the garden, so no house dust attached.  

The science behind it

I know that scientists have analysed the chemical composition of the threads. The threads are made of Spidroins proteins that form the majority of spider silk fibers. 

Major Ampullate Spidroin Structure. The repetitive domains of major ampullate (dragline) silk consists of alternating regions of polyalanine and glycine-rich sequences. These repetitive domains are important for the strong and elastic features of the dragline silk fibers ( Xu and Lewis,1990). (Synthetic Spider Silk Production)

It seems very unlikely that what we are seeing here are alternating regions of  Alanine and Glycine (Amino Acids) rich regions in the proteins. More likely we see crystalline and non-crystalline regions in the threads? Maybe different spidroins? I have really no idea. There is a lot to explore...


15 June 2026

Are there biological facts that the theory of evolution does not explain and does not need to explain?

The theory of evolution is the overarching unifying theory in biology. Are there biological facts that the theory of evolution does not need to explain? Or does the theory of evolution have to explain every fact about life? According to the theory of evolution every species and every individual of a species is the result of evolution. That would imply that every feature of an organism must somehow be explained by the theory of evolution. 

Aerodynamic forces on a bird (Videler, 2012)

Even at the time when I was a student and attended evolutionary biology courses and did lab experiments on evolution, I had the vague idea that the theory of evolution was incomplete, although at the time I couldn't say why, or what exactly was missing (here). There is so much to explain, and "A change in gene frequencies over time" and "Differential reproduction of heritable variation" seem far too simple for the task. Yes, there was a Second and Third Evolutionary Synthesis, but still a lot was missing. Obviously, the planetary, geological and cosmological context of evolution is often missing in the textbooks. Last year I blogged about the fact that evolution textbooks are suffocating: very low levels of Oxygen!  My list of top 20 evolution books (blog) reflects my preoccupation with the question of what is missing. Furthermore, physicist Rolie Barth pointed out physical factors and constraints in evolution (blog) [1]. At the other end of the spectrum: is evolution supposed to explain human behaviour, intelligence, consciousness, psychology, language, culture, civilization, war? What is the scope of the theory? Where does it end?

A few days ago I had an interesting discussion with google-AI about the question: Are there biological facts that the theory of evolution does not need to explain?  The initial answers seemed incorrect and incomplete. So, I demanded better answers and google-AI came with surprisingly insightful answers:

  1. What evolution does NOT need to explain: The physics of how cells physically move, stick together, or split. For example, when a sheet of cells bends into a tube, it follows basic laws of fluid mechanics and surface tension.
  2. What evolution DOES need to explain: Why the cells bend into a tube at that exact moment, in that specific location, to form a spinal cord. The timing, the instructions, and the genetic switches that trigger those physical movements are entirely shaped by natural selection.
  3. What evolution does NOT explain: The electromagnetic forces that allow a hydrogen bond to form between Adenine and Thymine. That is pure physics and chemistry.
  4. What evolution DOES explain: Why a specific three-letter sequence (like UUU) maps to a specific amino acid (like Phenylalanine), and why this map is nearly universal across all life.
  5. Evolution does NOT explain: Why a hydrogen bond forms at all, why the universe is made of matter instead of antimatter, or the laws of thermodynamics that govern energy conversion.
  6. Evolution DOES explain: How life hijacked those inescapable physical realities and organized them into the intricate, Mendelian, metabolic, developmental masterpiece we call biology.

Additionally:

  • Lipid Bilayers: Amphiphilic lipid molecules automatically assemble into complex, spherical, semi-permeable cell membranes when exposed to water, driven entirely by hydrophobic physical forces.
  • Membraneless Organelles: Inside the cell, proteins and RNA's undergo liquid-liquid phase separation—similar to droplets of oil separating in water. This thermodynamic behaviour spontaneously forms highly organized, functional compartments (such as the nucleolus) without needing an explicit genetic blueprint directing every coordinate.

These examples can be expanded with:

Microtubules: the self-assembly of microtubules. The proteins themselves are inherited, but they self-assemble into microtubules. 

Biochemistry: See also the primacy of biochemistry as opposed to genetic determinism [2].

Bio-electricity: "Without bioelectricity, your cells couldn't communicate, your muscles couldn't move, and your heart wouldn't beat." [3]:

  • The Cellular Battery: Membrane Potential
  • Nervous System Communication
  • Muscle Contractions (Powering Movement and the Heart)
  • Wound Healing and Tissue Regeneration
  • Specialized Biological Superpowers (Electroreception, Electrogenesis)

Quantum effects: photosynthesis. 

Mechanical forces: Venus flytrap [4].

Van der Waals forces that hold molecules together (Gecko).

Hydrogen bonds (DNA bases).

Aerodynamics (birds, bats, insects), hydrodynamics (fishes, dolphins, sharks, blood flow).

Gravity: Effect on body size (scaling laws).

Geomagnetic field: is used by pigeons for navigation

etc. 

Read more...

12 June 2026

Autonome wereld en theodicee bij Taede Smedes (3)

"Het blog over Autonome Wereld bij Taede Smedes (2) is een van mijn meest bekeken blogs. En er kwamen soms vreemde reacties. Iemand die je een Taede Smedes-kenner zou kunnen noemen, schreef dat Taede Smedes nooit over het probleem van het kwaad had geschreven. Dat vond ik een vreemde bewering.
In een vorig blog (1) schreef ik over het probleem van het kwaad zoals beschreven in het boek God en Darwin van theoloog-godsdienstfilosoof Taede Smedes. Het probleem werd in dat boek maar heel kort aangestipt omdat het boek over een ander onderwerp ging. Toch werden er in dat boek zeer belangrijke en revolutionaire uitspraken gedaan. Sommigen (2) beweerden dat Taede Smedes nooit iets over het probleem van het kwaad had geschreven, en daaruit volgde op de een of andere manier dat ik het helemaal mis had. Of zo iets. Onzin! Onwetendheid! Smedes heeft wel degelijk over het probleem van het kwaad geschreven in zijn boek God en de Menselijke Maat (2006). Met name in Hoofdstuk 11 (toelichting, literatuurlijstje) (bewijst ook dat hij zich met de literatuur heeft beziggehouden)." 

Tot zover een draft blog dat ik nooit heb afgemaakt. Ik publiceer het nu ongewijzigd zoals het sinds 2011 als draft is blijven staan. De aanleiding is een blog van Taede Smedes: Lieke Marsman – Een oproep tot leven, 4 juni 2026. Dat blog opent met de woorden:

"Ik heb het feit dat kanker bestaat altijd gezien als een van de belangrijkste argumenten tegen het bestaan van een bovennatuurlijke God. ... Dat kanker bestaat, toont voor mij aan dat een bovennatuurlijke Schepper-God – zoals voorgesteld in het christendom – niet kan bestaan. Zo’n God is voor mij dan ook een illusie."

Je kunt in ieder geval vaststellen dat Smedes in de loop der jaren consistent is gebleven in dat opzicht [3].


Noten

  1. Autonome wereld en theodicee bij Taede Smedes (2) Het probleem van het kwaad, 28 november 2011. 
  2. Uitgerekend filosoof Jan Riemersma heeft vele malen gezegd dat je vooral Taede Smedes moest lezen. Overigens is het helemaal niet relevant of Smedes 'nooit over het probleem van het kwaad' geschreven heeft. Het gaat er om wat hij wel geschreven heeft. Daar doe ik het mee.
  3. Dit blog van Smedes over hetzelfde onderwerp had ik nog niet eerder gezien: Sluit zinloos lijden het bestaan van God uit? 17 mei 2010.