In this short video, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, chief spokesman for the IDF, shows us the conditions under which the six recently-murdered hostages were kept. (Trigger warning: blood.) For some reason I thought the hostages were being kept either in private residences or in rooms off the tunnels, not in the tunnels themselves. When you realize how many days these hostages have been sequestered by Hamas, even a few days of these conditions seem unbearable. Clearly the IDF has already done DNA analysis of the blood and will do so on hair from hairbushes.
The conditions under which Israel keeps Palestinian prisoners, including convicted terrorists, are far, far better than the conditions under which Hamas keeps its hostages. Palestinian prisoners in Israel live in sheer luxury compared to what you see below, with food they can cook themselves, fresh air, and good beds.
Remember too that there are still about 60 living hostages in Gaza. They should be released unconditionally—no deals, no bargaining. Of course Hamas won’t do it, but in my view making a deal for the hostages by releasing Palestinian terrorists is a bad business. Right now the world should be baying not for a cease-fire or a deal, but for Hamas to surrender unconditionally and release the hostages, or the IDF has the right to, and will, continue going after the enemy.
Here is a question that keeps me awake at nights: how do you define right versus left without referring to something, like the placement of our heart, an organ that is already tilted toward one side of the body (the left except in rare cases of situs inversus)?
For example, have a look at a bilaterally symmetrical organism below, in this case one of my favorites (Merriam-Webster defines bilateral symmetry as “symmetry in which similar anatomical parts are arranged on opposite sides of a median axis so that only one plane can divide the individual into essentially identical halves”.) We know left from right because we define them consistently, and that’s because humans are NOT bilaterally symmetrical so we can all agree on which side is which.
But now I’ll ask you to answer this. (i.e., by pointing) Assume you’re talking to a person (a Martian?) who has never heard about right vs. left sides. Tell them, using the diagram of one of my favorite organisms below, standing upright, which side is the right and which the left without referring to your own body, to any minute differences in the diagram, or to asymmetries in the environment (e.g. the world or the solar system). Since both sides are identical, how do you know which one is right without referring to how we’ve already defined it, presumably based on our own bodies? Explain to a Martian who is bilaterally symmetrical which side is its right and which its left, and how they would know it.
Partial image by Charl Hutchings, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
I’m not sure if I’m making myself clear here, so I looked in the Oxford English Dictyion for the definition of “right”. There are of course many definitions that don’t refer to the direction, but here’s what it gives for the direction:
a. of, relating to, situated on, or being the side of the body which is away from the side on which the heart is mostly located b. located nearer to the right hand than to the left c. located to the right of an observer facing the object specified or directed as the right arm would point when raised out to the side d. located on the right of an observer facing in the same direction as the object specifiedThis didn’t help, because it all comes down to how humans have defined the sides based on our own asymmetries.
This problem is connected with something that’s always intrigued me: how do directional asymmetries evolve, in which an animals is predictably asymmetrical, like our hearts being more on one side or the others? (There are some creatures with “fluctuating asymmetry”, in which right is different from left, but it’s not consistent, like lobsters in which one claw is a crusher and the other a slicer, or flatfish that develop to lie randomly on its left or right side sides as adults. Evolving these doesn’t pose the problem I describe below.)
If we evolved from a bilaterally symmetrical (or radially symmetrical) organism, then even if front and back are genetically specified, as they are, how can you evolve from such a creature into an organism that has features consistently on the right (or left) sides? The chemical gradients in a bilaterally symmetrical ancestor are presumably the same on both sides, so how can a gene mutation arise that consistently recognizes a given side to give rise to a feature on that side? In other words, how can a mutation KNOW whether it is on the left or right side of the body? (Of course once an initial directional asymmetry has evolved, it creates a directional cue that can be used to evolve further directional asymmetries. It’s the evolution of the first directional feature that is the difficulty.)
I’ve discussed this more clearly in two old posts on this site (here and here), which gives some partial answers residing in how asymmetrical molecules or asymmetrical beating of cilia could lead to the evolution of directional asymmetry from bilateral asymmetry.
But the problem above still nags at me: how do you tell a bilaterally symmetrical Martian which side is right and which is left without referring to our own bodies? Can it be done?
Again, this may be a non-problem, but I’ve seen no definition of “right” or “left” independent of our own bodily asymmetries.