Some of the Things That Molecules Do

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Episode no.Episode 2
Directed byBill Pope
"Some of the Things That Molecules Do"
Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey episode
Episode no.Episode 2
Directed byBill Pope
Written by
Narrated byNeil deGrasse Tyson
Featured musicAlan Silvestri
Editing by
  • Michael O'Halloran
  • John Duffy
  • Eric Lea
Production code102
Original air dateMarch 16, 2014 (2014-03-16)
Running time44 minutes
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Standing Up in the Milky Way"
Next 
"When Knowledge Conquered Fear"
List of episodes

"Some of the Things That Molecules Do" is the second episode of the American documentary television series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey. It premiered on March 16, 2014 on Fox.

The episode received positive reviews, with critics praising the beautiful graphics as well as the wonder-inspiring and straightforward narrative of how evolution works.[1][2] Despite positive reviews, however, the episode received a 2.0/5 in the 18-49 rating/share, with 4.95 million American viewers watching it live—a decrease from the 5.77 million viewers who watched the series premiere.[3]

The human eye was used as a device to explain evolution to the audience.

The episode covers several facets of the origin of life and evolution. Tyson describes both artificial selection via selective breeding, using the example of mankind's domestication of wolves into dogs, and natural selection that created species like polar bears. Tyson uses the Ship of the Imagination to show how DNA, genes, and mutation work, and how these led to the diversity of species as represented by the Tree of Life, including how complex organs such as the eye came about as a common element. Tyson describes extinction of species and the five great extinction events that wiped out numerous species on Earth, while some species, such as the tardigrade, were able to survive and continue life. Tyson speculates on the possibility of life on other planets, such as Saturn's moon, Titan, as well as how abiogenesis may have originated life on Earth. The episode concludes with an animation from the original Cosmos showing the evolution of life from a single cell to mankind today, with music from Vivaldi's Mandolin Concerto.

Reception

References

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