Chapter 9
Strobel goes back to interview Stephen C. Meyer again. This time he wants to discuss DNA.
Meyer has written extensively on the implications of the information in DNA and Strobel wants to find out if there any naturalistic processes that can account for the appearance of biological data in the earliest cells.
Meyer likens the DNA to a library. DNA is encoded with chemical characters A,G,C,and T. Different arrangement of characters yields different sequences of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. So comparing the DNA to a library he says "The organism accesses the information that it needs from DNA so it can build some of its critical components."
So the idea of this chapter is Meyer is describing the fact that DNA is full of information.
Now if you can't explain where the information comes from, you haven't explained life, because it's the information that makes the molecules into something that actually functions.Nowhere in our world do we find information that wasn't the result of intelligence. Books, computers, mathematical equations...anything that has information in it was produced by intelligence. Yet evolutionists would have you believe that the incredible amount of information and the incredibly complex biological data inside of every single cell was produced by natural processes.
He uses the example of hiking on a mountain and coming across some rocks spelling out "Welcome Stephen", now these rocks are clearly relaying information. Do we suppose that the wind knocked around the rocks until they accidentally spelled out something that is able to be related through information processing? Well, it's possible extremely improbable but it would be considered a miracle of a sort because the chances of the wind producing translatable information ...well the odds are outrageous! So what about his brother who was hiking in front of him...could he have placed the rocks in such a manner that would spell out a greeting for the one behind him?? Well, to an evolutionist he would say....intelligence couldn't possibly have formed those rocks in that pattern. (you see where this example is going
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Then they discuss the prebiotic soup of early earth. Darwin speculated that life may have originated when a protein compound was chemically formed...in some warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, light, heat, electricity, etc. present.
Meyer says, there is no evidence that this "soup" ever existed. He said there would have been a lot of nitrogen in this soup because it would have been rich in amino acids and amino acids are nitrogenous. So in examining the earliest sediments of earth they should find large deposits of nitrogen rich minerals......never been found.
Interestingly enough Meyer states in the next section entitled "Random Chance" ...that "Virtually all origin-of-life experts have utterly rejected that approach"
Yet it is still alive at the popular level. Meyer says that the first molecule would have had to have a certain level of protein folding in order to perform a function....the odds of a molecule forming by chance in the exact way it needs to to be functional is 1 chance in 1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000."
And that would be only ONE protein molecule--a minimally complex cell would need between three hundred and five hundred protein molecules!!!! Plus, all of this would have to be accomplished in a mere 100 million years, which is the approximate window of time between the earth cooling and the first micro fossils we've found." "To suggest chance against those odds is really to invoke a naturalistic miracle. It's a confession of ignorance. It's another way of saying 'We don't know' ".
There is a lot more in this chapter that is mind boggling in regards to the awesome complexity in DNA and Meyers effectively debunks all evolutionist arguments.
Ok, I just found a series on youtube that kind of does what I'm doing here in summarizing this book. Here is a portion of that series dealing with this particular chapter.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CamNoA6Cfjc&feature=related