Was It Designed?
Your Sense of Taste
▪ Bite into your favorite food, and immediately your sense of taste is activated. But just how does this amazing process work?
Consider: Your tongue
Taste, however, involves more than your mouth. The five million odor receptors in your nose
Scientists have developed an electrochemical nose that uses chemical gas sensors as an artificial olfaction device. Nevertheless, neurophysiologist John Kauer, quoted in Research/
No one would deny that the sense of taste adds pleasure to a meal. Researchers are still baffled, though, by what causes people to favor one type of taste over another. “Science may have many of the basics of the human body down,” says Science Daily, “but our sense of taste and smell are still somewhat of a mystery.”
What do you think? Did your sense of taste come about by chance? Or is this evidence of design?
[Footnote]
In recent years some scientists have added umami to the list. Umami describes the unique salts of glutamic acid. One of them is, among others, the flavor enhancer monosodium glutamate.
[Diagram/
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A cross section of the tongue
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Papillae
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© Dr. John D. Cunningham/