RE: DNA Proves Existence of a Designer
May 6, 2018 at 8:41 am
(This post was last modified: May 6, 2018 at 8:47 am by CDF47.)
1. Where do the information bearing properties of DNA come from?
2. Please describe the origins of genetic information.
3. DNA is located in a protein molecule. It takes DNA to build a protein. Which came first, the DNA or the protein?
4. Please provide a step-by-step natural explanation of the process of how DNA is copied and transferred to an assembly line where amino acids are linked together precisely as instructed, then formed into a functional protein, then transported to an exact location in a protein machine prior to machine operation. Explain how all the transport systems work. Explain the sequences of operation, the communication protocol, the operations of the machines, the assembly instructions, energy harvesting,.... Please explain how this all happened naturally.
The DNA that was formally referred to as "junk DNA" is no longer junk DNA. It is non-coding DNA. It acts like an operating system (over 85 percent of the DNA). 3 percent is used for coding.
Some great information below:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noncoding_DNA
2. Please describe the origins of genetic information.
3. DNA is located in a protein molecule. It takes DNA to build a protein. Which came first, the DNA or the protein?
4. Please provide a step-by-step natural explanation of the process of how DNA is copied and transferred to an assembly line where amino acids are linked together precisely as instructed, then formed into a functional protein, then transported to an exact location in a protein machine prior to machine operation. Explain how all the transport systems work. Explain the sequences of operation, the communication protocol, the operations of the machines, the assembly instructions, energy harvesting,.... Please explain how this all happened naturally.
The DNA that was formally referred to as "junk DNA" is no longer junk DNA. It is non-coding DNA. It acts like an operating system (over 85 percent of the DNA). 3 percent is used for coding.
Some great information below:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noncoding_DNA