Page 124 - The Miraculous Machine that Works for an Entire Lifetime: Enzyme
P. 124
Harun Yahya
still be impossible for any more to be produced. Therefore, the DNA-
enzyme relationship constitutes an inseparable whole: The two have to
co-exist together.
Evolutionists cannot offer any explanation as to what came into
existence and how in our DNA-based life. These fundamental compo-
nents display a truly irreducible complexity that must have existed
ever since their beginning.
Charles McCombs, an organic chemist from California University,
states that there can be no evolutionary history behind DNA and DNA
enzymes:
If the repair mechanism evolved first, what use is a repair mechanism if
DNA has not evolved yet? If DNA evolved first, how would the DNA
even know it would be better off with a repair mechanism? Can mole-
cules think? DNA is not a stable chemical molecule, and without a repair
mechanism, it would easily deteriorate by chemical oxidation and other
processes. There is no mechanism to explain how DNA could exist for
millions of years while the repair mechanism evolved. DNA would just
decompose back into pond scum before the alleged billions of random
chance mutations could ever form the repair mechanism. 74
It's of course out of question that two molecules might evolve to-
gether. Yet recall that evolutionists still can't explain the emergence of
even a single DNA molecule or a single enzyme. Evolutionists will nev-
er be able to explain this because a chance emergence of an enzyme in-
dependently of DNA, or of DNA independently of enzymes, or even of
a single enzyme or protein constituting DNA, is impossible.
The DNA-and-enzyme dilemma, which makes all claims regard-
ing evolution totally irrelevant, is greeted with great astonishment by
evolutionists. The American evolutionist biologist Frank B. Salisbury,
whose articles appear in the American Biology Teacher magazine, admits
the impossibility of any evolutionary explanation:
Surely our ideas about the origin of life will have to change radically with
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