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The Design in Water
This,
as most other of the Atheists' Arguments, proceeds from a deep Ignorance
of Natural Philosophy; for if there were but half the sea that now is,
there would also be but half the Quantity of Vapours, and consequently
we could have but half as many Rivers as now there are to supply all the
dry land we have at present, and half as much more; for the quantity of
Vapours which are raised, as well as to the heat which raised them. The
Wise Creator therefore did so prudently order it, that the seas should
be large enough to supply Vapours sufficient for all the land.
John Ray, 18th century British Naturalist 76
Most of our planet is covered with water. Oceans and seas make up three
fourths of the earth's surface while the land itself contains countless
numbers of rivers and lakes. The snow and ice on the summits of lofty
mountains is water in its frozen form. A substantial part of the earth's
water is in the sky: every cloud contains thousands--sometimes millions-of
tons of water in the form of vapor. From time to time some of this water
vapor turns into drops of liquid and falls to the ground: in other words,
it rains. Even the air you're breathing now contains a certain amount
of water vapor.
In short, no matter where you may look on the surface of the earth, you're
certain to see water around somewhere. Indeed, the room you're sitting
in at this moment probably contains about forty to fifty liters of water
in it. Look around. You can't see it? Look again, more carefully, this
time raising your eyes from these words and look at your hands, arms,
legs, and body. That 40-50 liter mass of water is you!
It's you because about 70% of the human body is water. Your body's cells
contain many things but nothing so much or so important as water. The
biggest part of the blood that circulates everywhere in your body is of
course water. This is true not just of yourself or of other people however:
the bulk of the bodies of all living things is water. Without water it
seems, life is impossible.
Water is a substance that was specially designed so as to be the basis
of life. Each and every one of its physical and chemical properties was
specially created for life.
The Fitness of Water
The biochemist A. E. Needham notes how essential liquids are for life
to form in his book The Uniqueness of Biological Materials. If the laws
of the universe had allowed only solids or gases to exist, there never
would have been any life. The reason is that the atoms of solids are too
tightly-packed and static and simply will not allow the dynamic molecular
processes that are necessary for life to take place. In gases, on the
other hand, the atoms move about freely and chaotically: it would be impossible
for the complex mechanisms of life-forms to function within such a structure.
In
short, the existence of a liquid environment is essential in order for
the processes necessary for life to take place. The most ideal of all
liquids-or rather, the only ideal liquid-for this purpose is water.
That water possesses properties that are extraordinarily fit for life
is something that drew the attention of scientists long ago. The first
attempt to investigate this subject in detail however was Astronomy and
General Physics Considered with Reference to Natural Theology, a book
by the English naturalist William Whewell that was published in 1832.
Whewell had been examining the thermal properties of water and noticed
that some of them seemed to violate the accepted rules of natural law.
The conclusion he drew from this was that these inconsistencies should
be taken as proof that this substance had been specially created in order
for life to exist.
The most comprehensive analysis of the suitability of water for life
was to come from Lawrence Henderson, a professor in the Department of
Biological Chemistry of Harvard University, about a century after Whewell's
book. In his book The Fitness of the Environment, which some were
later to call "the most important scientific work of the first quarter
of the 20th century", Henderson reaches this conclusion concerning the
natural environment of our world:
The fitness…(of these compounds constitutes)
a series of maxima-unique or nearly unique properties of water, carbon
dioxide, the compounds of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and the ocean -
so numerous, so varied, so complete among all things which are concerned
in the problem that together they form certainly the greatest possible
fitness.77
The Extraordinary Thermal Properties of Water
One of the subjects dealt with in Henderson's book is the thermal properties
of water. Henderson notes that there are five distinct ways in which the
thermal properties of water are unusual:
1) All known solids decrease in size as they grow colder. This is true
of all known liquids as well: as their temperatures decrease, they lose
volume. As volume decreases, density increases and thus the colder parts
of the liquid become heavier. This is why the solid forms of substances
weigh more (by volume) than they when they are in liquid form. There is
one case where this "law" is violated: water. Like other liquids, water
contracts in volume as it grows colder but it only does this down to a
certain temperature (4°C) thereafter-unlike all other known liquids-it
suddenly begins to expand and when it finally solidifies (freezes) it
expands even more. As a result, "solid water" is lighter than "liquid
water". According to the normal laws of physics, solid water, which is
to say ice, ought to be heavier than liquid water and should sink to the
bottom when it forms; instead, it floats.
2) When ice melts or water vaporizes, it absorbs heat
from its surroundings. When these transitions are reversed (that is, when
water freezes or vapor precipitates) heat is released. In physics the
term "latent heat" is used to describe this.78
All liquids have a latent heat of some sort or other but that of water
is among the highest known. At "normal" temperatures, the only liquid
whose latent heat when freezing is superior to that of water is ammonia.
In terms of its latent heat properties at vaporization on the other hand,
no other liquid can compare with water.
3) The "thermal capacity" of water, that is, the amount of heat necessary
to raise the temperature of water by one degree, is higher than the great
majority of other liquids.
4) The thermal conductivity of water, its ability to convey heat, is
at least four times higher than any other liquid.
5) The thermal conductivity of ice and snow on the other hand is low.
By now you are probably wondering what importance these seemingly technical
five physical properties could possibly have. As it turns out, the significance
of each and every one of them is enormous because life in general and
our own life in particular is possible in this world just because these
five properties are what they are.
Let's now take a look at them one by one.
The Effect of "Top-down" Freezing
Other liquids freeze from the bottom up; water freezes from the top down.
This is the first unusual property of water mentioned above and it is
crucial for the existence of water on the surface of the earth. Were it
not for this property, that is, if ice didn't float, much of our planet's
water would be locked up in ice and life would be impossible in its seas,
lakes, ponds, and rivers.

Unlike all other liquids, water expands when it freezes. Because of
this, ice floats in water. |
Let's examine this in detail to see why. There are many places in the
world where the temperature falls below 0°C in winter, often considerably
below that. Such cold will of course affect the water in seas, lakes,
etc. These bodies of water grow colder and colder and parts of them begin
to freeze. If ice didn't behave the way it does (if it didn't float in
other words) this ice would sink to the bottom while the warmer bits of
water would rise to the surface and be exposed to the air. But the temperature
of that air is still below freezing so these will freeze too and sink
to the bottom. This process would continue until there was no liquid water
left at all. But this isn't what happens. What happens instead is this:
As it gets colder, water grows heavier until it reaches 4°C at which point
everything suddenly changes. After this, the water begins to expand and
it becomes lighter as the temperature drops. As a result, the 4°C water
remains on the bottom, the 3°C water above it, the 2°C water above that
and so on. Only at the surface does the temperature of the water actually
reach 0°C and there it freezes. But only the surface has frozen: the 4°C
layer of water beneath the ice remains liquid and that is enough for underwater
creatures and plants to continue to live.

Because water freezes from the top down, the world's oceans remain
liquid even though there may be layers of ice on the surface. If water
didn't have this "extraordinary" property, nearly all the world's
water would be locked up in ice and life in the sea would be impossible |
(We should note here that the fifth property of water-the low thermal
conductivity of ice and snow-is also crucial in this process. Because
they are such poor conductors of heat, the layers of ice and snow keep
the heat in the water below from escaping into the atmosphere. As a result
of all this, even if the air temperature falls to -50°C, the layer of
sea ice will never be more than a meter or two thick and there will be
many fractures in it. Creatures such as seals and penguins that dwell
in polar regions can take advantage of this to reach the water beneath
the ice.)
Again let us recall what would happen if water didn't behave this way
and acted "normally" instead. Suppose water continued to become denser
the lower its temperature became like all other liquids and ice sank to
the bottom. What then?
Well in that case, the freezing process in the oceans and seas would
start from the bottom and continue all the way to the top because there
would be no layer of ice on the surface to prevent the remaining heat
from escaping. In other words, most of earth's lakes, seas, and oceans
would become solid ice with a layer of water perhaps a few meters deep
on top of it. Even when the air temperature increased, the ice at the
bottom would never melt completely. In the seas of such a world, no life
could exist and in an ecological system with dead seas, life on land would
also be impossible. In other words, if water didn't "misbehave" and acted
normally, our planet would be a dead world.
Why doesn't water act normally? Why does it suddenly begin to expand
at 4°C after having contracted the way it should?
That is a question that nobody has ever been able to answer.
Sweat and Cool off
The second and third properties of water mentioned above-high latent
heat and thermal capacity greater than other liquids-are also very important
for us. These two properties are the keys to an important bodily function
whose value we rarely give a thought to. That function is sweating.
Indeed, what good is sweating?
To explain this, we have to give you a bit of background first. All mammals
have bodily temperatures that are fairly close to one another. Although
there is some variation, it is not much and mammalian body temperatures
range between 35-40°C. In human beings it is about 37°C under normal conditions.
This is a very critical temperature and absolutely has to be kept constant.
If your body's temperature were to fall just a few degrees, many of its
vital functions would fail. If it rises even a few fractions of a degree,
as it does when we become ill, the effects can be devastating. A sustained
bodily temperature over 40°C is likely to bring on death.

The thermal properties of water enable us to discharge excessive heat
from our body through sweating. |
In short, our bodily temperature has a very critical equilibrium in which
there is very little room for variation.
However our body has a serious problem here: it is active all the time.
All the physical movements, even those of machines, require the production
of energy to make them happen. But whenever energy is produced, heat is
always generated as a by-product. You can easily see this for yourself.
Put this book aside and go take a ten-kilometer run in the blazing sun
and see how hot your body gets.
But in fact, if you think about it you'll realize that you didn't get
nearly as hot as you should have done...
The unit of heat is the calorie. A normal person running 10 kilometers
in one hour will generate about 1,000 calories of heat. That heat has
to be discharged from the body. If it weren't, you'd collapse into coma
before you finished the first kilometer.
That danger however is precluded by the second two properties that water
has.
The first of these is the thermal capacity of water. What this means
is that in order to increase the temperature of water, a great deal of
heat is required. Water makes up about 70% of our body but because of
its thermal capacity, that water doesn't get hot very fast. Imagine an
action that generates a 10°C increase in bodily heat. If we had alcohol
instead of water in our bodies, the same action would lead to a 20°C increase
and for other substances with lower thermal capacities the situation would
be even worse: increases of 50°C for salt, 100°C for iron, and 300°C for
lead. The high thermal capacity of water is what prevents such enormous
changes in heat from taking place.
But even an increase of 10°C is would be fatal as we mentioned above.
To forestall that, the second property of water-its high latent heat-comes
into play.
To keep itself cool in the face of the heat that is being generated,
the body employs the sweating mechanism. When we sweat, water spreads
over the surface of the skin and quickly evaporates. But because water's
latent heat is so great, that evaporation requires large amounts of heat.
The heat, of course, is withdrawn from the body and thus we are kept cool.
This cooling process is so effective that it can sometimes cause us to
experience a chill even when the weather is rather warm.
Because of this, someone who has run ten kilometers will reduce his body
temperature by 6°C as a result of the evaporation of just a liter's worth
of water. The more energy he expends, the more his body temperature will
increase but, at the same time, the more he will sweat and thus cool off.
Among the factors that make this magnificent thermostat system of the
body possible, foremost are the thermal properties of water. No other
liquid would provide for sweating as efficiently as water does. If alcohol
were present instead of water for example, the reduction in heat would
be only 2.2°C; even in the case of ammonia, it would be only 3.6°C.
There is another important aspect of this matter. If the heat released
within the body were not conveyed to the surface, that is to the skin,
neither the two properties of water nor the process of sweating would
be of any use. Thus the structure of the body must also be highly conductive
of heat. It is at this point that another vital property of water comes
into play: unlike all other known liquids, water has a very high capacity
for thermal conductivity, that is, the ability to conduct heat. For this
reason, the body conveys the heat generated inside it to the skin. (The
blood vessels near the skin expand to achieve this and this is why we
become flushed when we're overheated.) If water's thermal conductivity
were less by a factor of two or three, the rate of conveyance of heat
to the skin would be much slower and this would make it impossible for
complex life forms like mammals to live.
What all this shows is that three very different thermal properties of
water work together to serve a common purpose: cooling off the bodies
of complex life forms such as human beings. Water is a liquid specially
designed for this task.
A Temperate World
The five different thermal properties of water mentioned in Henderson's
book The Fitness of Environment also play a key role in bringing about
the mild and balanced climate that Earth has.
Water's greater latent heat and thermal capacity as compared with other
liquids are the reasons that bodies of water heat up and cool off more
slowly than does the land. On land, the difference in temperature between
the hottest and coldest places can reach as high as 140°C; at sea, that
difference varies at most between 15-20°C. The same situation exists in
the difference between daytime and nighttime temperatures: in arid environments
on land, the difference in temperature can be as much as 20-30°C; at sea,
this is never more than a few degrees. And not only the seas are affected
in this way: the water vapor in the atmosphere is also a big balancing
agent. One result of this is that in desert regions where there is very
little water vapor present, the difference between daytime and nighttime
temperatures is extreme while in regions where a maritime climate prevails,
the difference is much less.
Thanks to these unique thermal properties of water, the temperature differences
between summer and winter or between night and day remain constantly within
limits such that human beings and other living things can survive. If
the surface of our world had less water than it does land, the temperature
differences between night and day would have been much greater, large
tracts of land would have been desert, and life might have been impossible
or, at the very least, much more difficult. Similarly, if the thermal
properties of water had been different from what they are, the result
would have been a planet quite unsuitable for life.
Having examined all these thermal properties of water, Henderson concludes:
To sum up, this property appears to possess a threefold
importance. First, it operates powerfully to equalise and to moderate
the temperature of the earth; secondly, it makes possible very effective
regulation of the temperature of the living organism; and thirdly it favours
the meteorological cycle. All of these effects are true maxima, for no
other substance can in this respect compare with water. 79

The huge volume of water in the earth's seas keeps the planet's temperature
in balance. For this reason, the differences between daytime and nighttime
temperatures are quite small in regions near the sea, especially along
seacoasts. In desert regions far from the sea, the diffference between
daytime and nighttime temperatures can be as high as 40°C. |
High Surface Tension
The properties of water that we have considered till now are thermal:
that is, they are its heat-related properties. Water also has a number
of physical properties which, as it turns out, are also extraordinarily
fit for life.
One of these is water's surface tension, which is extremely high. "Surface
tension" is defined as a behavior of the free surface of a liquid to act
like an elastic skin under tension. It is caused by attractive forces
between the molecules in the surface of the liquid.
The best examples of the effects of surface tension are to be seen in
water. Indeed, water's surface tension is so high that some odd physical
phenomena take place as a result. A cup can hold a water mass which is
slightly higher than its own height without spilling out. A metal needle
carefully placed on a motionless watery surface will float.

Plants are designed to take advantage of water's high surface
tension, thanks to which, water can be made to rise many meters up
into even the highest leaves of a forest canopy.
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The surface tension of water is much higher than that of any other known
liquid. Some of the biological consequences of this are crucial and this
is particularly evident in the case of plants.
Have you ever wondered how plants are able to convey water from the depths
of the soil many meters into the air without pumps, muscles, or the like?
The answer to this puzzle is surface tension. The channels in the roots
and stems of plants are designed to take advantage of water's high surface
tension. These channels grow thinner the higher they reach and quite literally
cause water to "creep up" on its own.
What makes this excellent design possible is the high surface tension
of water. If water's surface tension were as low as it is in most other
liquids, it would be physiologically impossible for large plants such
as trees to live on dry land.
Another important consequence of water's high surface tension is the
fragmentation of rock. Because its surface tension is so high, water is
able to penetrate into the deepest recesses of rock through the tiniest
of cracks where it freezes when the temperature drops below zero. Water,
as we have seen, is unusual in that it expands when it freezes. This expansion
exerts interior forces upon rock that causes it eventually to break up.
This process is vitally important because it releases the minerals trapped
in rock into the environment and also contributes to the formation of
soil.
The Chemical Properties of Water
In addition to its physical properties, the chemical properties of water
are also extraordinarily fit for life. Foremost among these properties
is that it is an excellent solvent: nearly all chemical substances are
capable of being dissolved in water.
A very important consequence of this is that useful minerals and similar
substances that are locked up in the land get dissolved in water and transported
to the sea by rivers. It is estimated that five billion tons of such matter
are carried into the sea every year. These substances are vital for sea-life.
Water also accelerates (catalyzes) nearly all known
chemical reactions. Another important chemical property of water is that
its chemical reactivity is at an ideal level. Water is neither too reactive
and thus potentially destructive (as sulfuric acid for example) nor is
it too inert (like argon which takes part in no chemical reactions). To
quote Michael Denton: "It seems that, like all other properties, the reactivity
of water is ideally fit for both its biological and its geological role."80
Additional details concerning the fitness of the chemical properties
of water for life are constantly being revealed as researchers investigate
the matter more. Harold Morowitz, a biophysics professor from the University
of Yale, makes this comment:
The past few years have witnessed the developing study
of a newly understood property of water (i.e., proton conductance) that
appears to be almost unique to that substance, is a key element in biological-energy
transfer, and was almost certainly of importance to the origin of life.
The more we learn the more impressed some of us become with nature's fitness
in a very precise sense…81
Water's Ideal Viscosity
Whenever we think of a liquid, the image that forms in our minds is that
of a substance that is extremely fluid. In actual fact, different liquids
have highly differing degrees of viscosity: the viscosities of tar, glycerin,
olive oil, and sulfuric acid for example vary considerably. And when we
compare such liquids with water, the difference becomes even more pronounced.
Water is 10 billion times more fluid than tar, 1,000 times more so than
glycerin, 100 times more than olive oil, and 25 times more than sulfuric
acid.

Water's low viscosity is vitally important to us. If water were only
slightly more viscous, it would be impossible for blood to be transported
through the body's capillary system. For example the complex system
of veins of our body's liver (shown above) would never have been able
to exist. |
As this quick comparison should indicate, water has a very low degree
of viscosity. Indeed, if we discount a few substances such as ether and
liquid hydrogen, water appears to have a viscosity that is less than anything
except gases.
Does water's low viscosity have any importance for us? Would things be
different if this vital liquid were a little more or a little less viscous?
Michael Denton answers that question for us:
The fitness of water would in all probability be less if its viscosity
were much lower. The structures of living systems would be subject to
far more violent movements under shearing forces if the viscosity were
as low as liquid hydrogen...If the viscosity of water was much lower,
delicate structures would be easily disrupted... and water would be incapable
of supporting any permanent intricate microscopic structures. The delicate
molecular architecture of the cell would probably not survive.
If the viscosity was higher, the controlled movement
of large macromolecules and particularly structures such as mitochondria
and small organelles would be impossible, as would processes like cell
division. All the vital activities of the cell would be effectively frozen,
and cellular life of any sort remotely resembling that with which we are
familiar would be impossible. The development of higher organisms, which
is critically dependent on the ability of cells to move and crawl around
during embryogenesis, would certainly be impossible if the viscosity of
water was even slightly greater than it is.82
Water's low viscosity is essential not only for cellular motion but also
for the circulatory system.

Water's low viscosity is essential for all living things, even plants.
The tiny veins in the leaf seen at the left are able to transport
water because it is so fluid.
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All living creatures with a body size of more than a quarter of a millimeter
have a centralized circulatory system. The reason is that beyond that
size, it is not possible for nutriments and oxygen to be diffused throughout
the organism. That is, they can no longer be taken directly into the cell
nor can their by-products be discharged. There are many cells in an organism's
body and thus it is necessary for the oxygen and energy taken into the
body to be distributed (pumped) to them through "ducts" of some sort;
similarly, other channels are necessary to carry away the waste. These
"ducts" are the veins and arteries of the circulatory system. The heart
is the pump that keeps this system moving while the substance carried
through the "ducts" is the liquid we call "blood", which is mostly water.
(95% of blood plasma-the material remaining after blood cells, proteins,
and hormones have been removed, is water.)
This is why the viscosity of water is so important for the efficient
functioning of the circulatory system. If water had the viscosity of tar
for example, certainly no organic heart could pump it. If water had the
viscosity even of olive oil, which is a hundred million times less viscous
than tar, the heart might be able to pump it, but it would be extremely
difficult and blood would never be able to reach all the billions of capillaries
that wend their ways through our bodies.
Let's take a closer look at those capillaries. Their purpose is to carry
the oxygen, nourishment, hormones, etc that are necessary for life to
every cell everywhere in the body. If a cell is more than 50 microns (a
micron is a thousandth of a millimeter) away from a capillary it cannot
take advantage of the capillary's "services". Cells more than 50 microns
from a capillary will starve to death.
This is why the human body was so created that the capillaries form a
network that pervades it completely. A normal human body has about 5 billion
capillaries whose total length, if stretched out, is about 950 kilometers.
In some mammals, there are as many as 3,000 capillaries in a single square
centimeter of muscle tissue. If you were to gather ten thousand of the
tiniest capillaries in the human body together, the resulting bundle might
be as thick as the lead of a pencil. The diameters of these capillaries
varies between 3-5 microns: that's three to five thousandths of a millimeter.
If blood is going to penetrate passages that narrow without blocking
them or slowing down, it certainly needs to be fluid and, thanks to water's
low viscosity, it is. According to Michael Denton, if water's viscosity
were just a bit more than what it is, the blood circulatory system would
be completely useless:
A capillary system will work only if the fluid being
pumped through its constituent tubes has a very low viscosity. A low viscosity
is essential because flow is inversely proportional to the viscosity...
From this it is easy to see that if the viscosity of water had a value
only a few times greater than it is, pumping blood through a capillary
bed would require enormous pressure and almost any sort of circulatory
system would be unworkable... If the viscosity of water had been slightly
greater and the smallest functional capillaries had been 10 microns in
diameter instead of 3, then the capillaries would have to occupy virtually
all of the muscle tissue to provide an effective supply of oxygen and
glucose. Obviously the design of macroscopic life forms would be impossible
or enormously constrained... It seems, then, the viscosity of water must
be very close to what it is if water is to be a fit medium for life.83
In other words, like all its other properties, the viscosity of water
is also "tailor-made" for life. Looking at the viscosities of different
liquids, we see that they differ by factors of many billions. Among all
those billions there is one liquid whose viscosity has been created to
be exactly what it needs to be: water.
Conclusion
Everything that we have seen in this chapter since its beginning shows
us that the thermal, physical, chemical, and viscosity properties of water
are exactly what they must be in order for life to exist. Water is so
perfectly designed for life that, in some cases, the very laws of nature
are suspended to make it so. The best example of this is the unexpected
and inexplicable expansion that takes place in water's volume when its
temperature falls below 4°C: if that didn't happen ice wouldn't float,
the seas would freeze all but solid, and life would be impossible.
Water is "just right" for life to a degree that cannot be compared with
any other liquid. The larger part of this planet, a world whose other
attributes (temperature, light, electromagnetic spectrum, atmosphere,
surface, etc) are all suitable for life, has been filled with just the
right amount of water necessary for life. It should be obvious that this
cannot all be accidental and that there must instead be intentional design.
To put it another way, all the physical and chemical properties of water
show us that it is created especially for life. The earth, purposefully
created for mankind to live in, was brought to life with this water that
was specially created to form the basis of human life. In water, Allah
has given us life and with it He causes the food by which we are nourished
to spring from the soil.
But the most important aspect of all this is that this truth, which has
been discovered by modern science, was revealed in the Qur'an, bestowed
upon humanity as a guide fourteen centuries ago. Concerning water and
mankind, Allah's word is revealed in the Qur'an thus:
It is He who sends down water from the sky. From
it you drink and from it come the shrubs among which you graze your herds.
And by it He makes crops grow for you and olives and dates and grapes
and fruit of every kind. There is certainly a Sign in that for people
who reflect. (Surat an-Nahl: 10-11)
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