Page 29 - If Darwin Had Known about DNA
P. 29
Adnan Oktar
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networks in a city such as Istanbul, with its almost 15 million popula-
tion, came into existence spontaneously as the result of such natural
phenomena as storms and earthquakes.
Prof. Gerald L. Schroeder, an Israeli scientist working in the fields
of physics and biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) describes the order inside the cell:
Microvilli
The human body acts as a finely tuned machine, a mag-
nificent metropolis in which, as its inhabitants, each
Lysosome of the 75 trillion cells, composed of 10 27 atoms,
moves in symbiotic precision. Seldom are
two cells simultaneously performing the
same act, yet their individual contribu-
tions combine smoothly to form life. 7
Cell membrane
Despite being an evolu-
tionist, the late astrobiologist
Carl Sagan speaks of the amaz-
Cophula ing order in the cell as if it were
a work of art:
A living cell is a marvel of detailed
Cell pore
and complex architecture. Seen
through a microscope, there is an ap-
pearance of almost frantic activity. On a
deeper level it is known that molecules are be-
Pyroxysome
ing synthesized at an enormous rate. Almost
Cell
skeleton