Do you realize you used an intricate heavy-duty engineering marvel?
Here’s some clues: most people own 2 of them, they have totally sealed bearings, and come with a lifetime guarantee of sorts; concrete pumping trucks and back-hoes use a similar principle.
Lego shows how the cruciate ligaments cross (side-on view) |
If you’re into football or athletics you would have heard of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), one of four ligaments that hold together the largest joint in the human body.
Thanks to ‘irreducible complexity’, if any one of these ligaments is missing the knee will not function properly. The whole structure has to be in place to work: the ligaments, the patella (knee cap), patella tendon, quadriceps tendon, bursae, menisci, cartilage and of course the leg bones that are connected: the femur and the tibia.
How could the knee possibly be functional while gradually evolving over time?
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:
Dr. Bertram Zarins, Mass General Hospital Sports
Medicine, Boston, MA
Central Oregon Community College, Dr. Mark
Eberle, Professor of Biological Sciences
Wikipedia
Image Credit: innovationsgames.com
I once heard the knee being compared to a mouse trap – leave one component out and how many mice would you catch? Demonstrating the knee’s cruciate ligaments with Lego proved quite a hit in class.
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