To: Bandolier
Maybe you can enlighten me. What do the evolutionists say came first, the cell, or the DNA/RNA code to CREATE that first cell?
If the cell came first, don't you need DNA to blueprint that cell? If the DNA coding came first, who wrote it?
Thanks.
39 posted on
06/24/2002 3:38:25 PM PDT by
berned
To: berned
What do the evolutionists say came first, the cell, or the DNA/RNA code to CREATE that first cell?Don't ask them difficult questions. It only confuses them.
To: berned
I would like a pro-evolutionist to explan briefly how either of the following complex systems could have evolved:
1. The human eye
2. The process of blood clotting
Answers must be 3500 words or less and cannot contain any of the phrases "could have," "might have," or "is believed to have."
To: berned
The thing that always stands out to me on these threads is the arrogance and rudeness of the evolution crowd. They take it so personal.
To: berned
Maybe you can enlighten me. What do the evolutionists say came first, the cell, or the DNA/RNA code to CREATE that first cell?
If the cell came first, don't you need DNA to blueprint that cell? If the DNA coding came first, who wrote it?
Thanks.
If nothing can exist without efficient cause, the universe must have had an efficient cause...God.
Who is the efficient cause of God?
If the universe can exist without efficient cause, God is a joke.
If nothing can exist without efficient cause, God cannot exist without efficient cause; who created him?
To: berned
"Maybe you can enlighten me. What do the evolutionists say came first, the cell, or the DNA/RNA code to CREATE that first cell?
If the cell came first, don't you need DNA to blueprint that cell? If the DNA coding came first, who wrote it?"
Evolution is about the origin of species, not the origin of life.
If I recall correctly, those who do study the origins of life believe that simple versions of DNA and proteins co-developed, and the mechanisms to protect and reproduce them were simple at first, and then became more complex. Remnants of such development, and the different directions it took, show up in the present 2 forms of cellular organization, (eukaryotes, prokaryotes).
201 posted on
06/24/2002 8:41:58 PM PDT by
RonF
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