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To: Right Wing Professor
When the think in bioinformatics, in genomics, we relate gene/protein sequences to other genes in the same organism, or in related organisms. The way those relationships arose is by evolution.

And the proof of the last sentence is???????

Should I wait another 150 years for an answer to the question above?

If someone didn't believe in evolution, then there would be no reason for them to expect, say, lemur sequences to be closer to humans than bacterial sequences.

With millions of species to choose from it is easy to find such favorable comparisons. The interesting thing though is that evolutionists (unlike real scientists) refuse to discuss anything but what favors their theory. Real scientists for example, when they wanted to find out more about the human genome examined not the monkey, not the lemur, but the fugu fish. They found that the genes of the fugu fish were so close to human genes that they were able to identify some 1,000 human genes which two different genome sequencing projects had been unable to identify. The Fugu Fish Project gives the details.

876 posted on 10/11/2002 4:56:18 AM PDT by gore3000
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To: gore3000
When the think in bioinformatics, in genomics, we relate gene/protein sequences to other genes in the same organism, or in related organisms. The way those relationships arose is by evolution.

And the proof of the last sentence is???????

....readily apparent to anyone who looks at the evidence with an open mind. Sorry, Gore3000, my policy is not to try to argue with nuts or fanatics. The statement that atheists cannot be physicians placed you in that category, along with f.Christian. Have a nice life.

947 posted on 10/11/2002 11:48:52 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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