Page 79 - Miracle in the Eye
P. 79

HARUN YAHYA

            sion, differences begin to develop. Some cells become bone; others become
            nerve cells or eye cells. How can two newly-divided cells, each containing
            the identical DNA, be so different from each other?
                Science has yet to explain how the cells decide to make such distinc-
            tions. We do know that if a cluster of cells "want" to be eye cells, to do so,
            they merely extract the necessary information from millions of lines of DNA.
            But this raises further questions: How do the cells know they want to be eye
            cells? How do they find and extract only the relevant "eye code" from mil-
            lions of lines of DNA?
                Besides choosing what kind of cell they want to be, cells also struc-
            turally organize themselves to bring about the different complicated organs
            we possess. How is this organization provided?


                Conscious Cells
                Let us consider the eye, made up of many different layers and compo-
            nents. Since different cells form the iris, cornea, pupil, lens and retina, each
            cell must surely know what it is supposed to do. How did these cells agree
            among themselves what feature they were going to become? How is it that
            cells from different layers and components never mix up? How do cells
            know how many times to divide, and when to stop?
                Cells possess an interesting sense of timing. No individual component
            develops faster or slower than any other. Components that serve a common
            function, and the blood vessels that feed them, all develop simultaneously.
                In other words, every single organ and its components developed from
            a single cell. We, their completed result, had no say over how this develop-
            ment took place, but merely found ourselves born out of what was once
            "nothing." When you look in the mirror, it's worth remembering that you
            had nothing to do with creating yourself. You simply found your eyes, ears,
            all your organs—and your soul—created and ready for use.


                Can Mutations Describe the Creation of the Eye?
                Thanks to effective propaganda enforced by some circles around the
            world, most people believe the theory of evolution has been scientifically ac-

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