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How much water is absorbed through the skin while showering?
The discussion centers around the question of how much water is absorbed through the skin while showering, exploring the properties of human skin in relation to water absorption and resistance. The scope includes theoretical and conceptual aspects of skin function and its evolutionary implications.
Participants express conflicting views on whether the skin is waterproof or water-resistant, with no consensus reached on the extent of water absorption through the skin while showering.
Some claims depend on definitions of "waterproof" versus "water-resistant," and the discussion includes references to biological phenomena that may not be fully resolved.
It is impossible that evolution could have produced such an important and complex organ as the human skin. The many intricacies of its functions are evidence of a Creator. One writer remarked: “The skin is a miracle of evolutionary engineering: it waterproofs the body, blocks out and destroys harmful bacteria, regulates temperature, and continuously communicates with the brain” (McCutcheon, 1989, p. 113). Yes, the skin is a “miracle” all right—but not a miracle of evolution. And yes, the skin was “engineered”—but the engineer was God!
"The answer, according to Dr. Robert Polisky, a dermatologist in Elk Grove Village, Illinois, is both yes and no. Skin, which protects the body against injury, microorganisms, and chemical agents, is water-resistant but not waterproof. The protective layer is called the stratum corneum, a thin membrane of mostly dead cells that's rich in a protein called keratin and also coated with sebum, an oil secreted through hair follicles. Together they create a water-resistant barrier that protects the dermis, where the capillaries and sweat glands lie. (If you want to verify that your skin isn't waterproof, take a long bath—the prunelike effect on your hands and feet is a result of the keratin becoming waterlogged.)"matthyaouw said:I believe that the skin is waterproof