.

Description of your first forum.

Postby dadman » Tue Sep 08, 2015 1:54 pm

< prepare page



Stephen Meyer is the author of The New York Times best selling book Darwin's Doubt: The Explosive Origin of Animal Life and the case for Intelligent Design]/url]

[url=https://youtu.be/UZTzMNRO_7I]Image
see video


























[QUOTE=goober;844529]Yes DNA contains [COLOR="Red"]encoded information[/COLOR], information used by the process of life to build proteins[/QUOTE]

[COLOR="Blue"]Indeed[/COLOR] [COLOR="DarkSlateGray"][url="http://www.ucg.org/science/dna-tiny-code-thats-toppling-evolution/"]DNA: the tiny code thats toppling evolution[/url][/COLOR]

[COLOR="DarkSlateGray"]DNA contains a genetic language
Let's first consider some of the characteristics of this genetic 'language.' For it to be rightly called a language, it must contain the following elements: an alphabet or coding system, correct spelling, grammar (a proper arrangement of the words), meaning (semantics) and an intended purpose.

Scientists have found the genetic code has all of these key elements. “The coding regions of DNA,” explains Dr. Stephen Meyer, “have exactly the same relevant properties as a computer code or language” (quoted by Strobel, p. 237, emphasis in original).

The only other codes found to be true languages are all of human origin. Although we do find that dogs bark when they perceive danger, bees dance to point other bees to a source and whales emit sounds, to name a few examples of other species” communication, none of these have the composition of a language. They are only considered low-level communication signals.

The only types of communication considered high-level are human languages, artificial languages such as computer and Morse codes and the genetic code. No other communication system has been found to contain the basic characteristics of a language.

Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft, commented that “DNA is like a software program, only much more complex than anything we've ever devised.”

Can you imagine something more intricate than the most complex program running on a supercomputer being devised by accident through evolution—no matter how much time, how many mutations and how much natural selection are taken into account?[/COLOR]


[url="http://www.ucg.org/science/dna-tiny-code-thats-toppling-evolution/"][COLOR="Purple"]continue[/COLOR][/url]

[COLOR="Blue"]sorry guys ... but supressing truth is not good for you[/COLOR]














https://search.yahoo.com/yhs/search?p=p ... mp=yhs-001
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/processes

noun, plural processes
[pros-es-iz, ‐uh-siz, ‐uh-seez or, esp. British, proh-ses-iz, proh-suh-seez] (Show IPA)

Image

1. a systematic series of actions directed to some end: to devise a process for homogenizing milk.
2. a continuous action, operation, or series of changes taking place in a definite manner: the process of decay.
3. Law ... the summons, mandate, or writ by which a defendant or thing is brought before court for litigation .. the whole course of the proceedings in an action at law.
4. Photography. photomechanical or photoengraving methods collectively
5. Biology, Anatomy. a natural outgrowth, projection, or appendage: a process of a bone.
6. the action of going forward or on.

7. the condition of being carried on .. verb (used with object)
10. to treat or prepare by some particular series of actions, as in manufacturing.
11. to handle (papers, records, etc.) by systematically organizing them, recording or making notations on them, following up with appropriate action, or the like: to process mail.
12. to require (someone) to answer questionnaires, perform various tasks, and sometimes to undergo physical and aptitude classification examinations before the beginning or termination of a period of service: The army processes all personnel entering or leaving the service.
13. to convert (an agricultural commodity) into marketable form by a special series of steps, as pasteurization.
14. to institute a legal process against; prosecute.
15. to serve a process or summons on.
16. Computers. to carry out operations on (data or programs).



















































...
dadman
Site Admin
 
Posts: 3857
Joined: Sat Oct 12, 2013 11:05 am

PreviousNext

Return to Your first forum

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests

cron