On the contrary, Man made computers prior to learning how DNA processed genetic instruction codes.
Issue 11-50 Tuesday, December 11, 2001 Scientific Papers of Co-Discoverer of DNA to be Housed at UCSD Copies of the collected scientific papers of Nobelist Francis Crick, co-discoverer of DNA and a member of the faculty of The Salk Institute, will be housed in the special collections section of the Geisel Library at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). The collection is coming to the UCSD library as part of an agreement in which the original papers will go to the Wellcome Library in London for about $2.5 million. The sum is believed to be the largest paid to a contemporary scientist for his or her archives, according to UCSD.Crick and James Dewey Watson were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962 for unraveling the double helical structure of DNA, the fundamental unit of heredity, in 1953. Crick was based at Cambridge University from 1947 to 1976, and subsequently left Britain for La Jolla and The Salk Institute, where he has worked for the last quarter century.
And we made levers before we cracked open bodies to see how joints work, but it is still on the same principle. You intentionally missed the point. Figures.