Page 72 - The Miracle of the Immune System
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                                 THE MIRACLE OF THE IMMUNE SYSTEM


              enough to produce 10 million weapons an hour on meeting an enemy. If
              we remember that this cell can produce different weapons for each of its
              millions of enemies, we can better understand the scope of the miracle in
              question here.
                   Some B cells become "memory cells". These cells do not immediately
              participate in the body’s defence, but keep molecular records of past in-
              vaders in order to accelerate a potential war in the future. Their memory
              is very strong. When the body meets the same enemy again, this time it is
              rapidly geared to the appropriate weaponry production. Thus, defence
              becomes faster and more efficient.
                   Here, we cannot help asking ourselves: "How can man, who consid-

              ers himself the most advanced being, have a memory weaker than that of
              a tiny cell?"
                   Unable to explain even how the memory of a normal human being
              forms and works, evolutionists never attempt to explain the existence of
              such a memory as a matter of evolution.
                   If a lump of flesh the size of a hundredth of a millimeter had only one
              single piece of information, and used this information for the benefit of
              mankind in the most accurate way, even this would be a miracle in its
              own right. However, what we are referring to here goes far beyond that.
              The cell stores millions of pieces of information for the benefit of man and
              uses this information accurately in combinations beyond man’s compre-
              hension. Man is able to survive thanks to the wisdom these cells display.
                   Memory cells are cells specially created to protect man’s health. Al-
              lah equipped them with strong memorizing ability by design. Otherwise,
              it would be impossible for the cell to develop a strategy on its own accord
              and give itself within this strategy the responsibility for storing informa-

              tion. Moreover, the cell is even unaware of such a need; much less does it
              feel the need to employ such a strategy.
                   In addition, there is another important question that needs to be an-
              swered about the strong memories of the memory cells. In a normal hu-
              man being, eight million cells die every second to be replaced by new
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