Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
Latest

Inside the Cell: DNA as a Library

Categories
Biology
Intelligent Design
Share
Facebook
Twitter/X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

On a new episode of ID the Future, biologist and CSC Senior Fellow Ann Gauger talks with Sarah Chaffee about the library of the cell: DNA. She draws a thought-provoking analogy to a famed institution in our nation’s capital.

If you’ve ever been to the Library of Congress, you know it’s a very special place, not like the local branch of the county library in your neighborhood. In fact, it’s the world’s largest. The result of James Madison’s vision and built on the seed of Thomas Jefferson’s personal library, the collection is matched for magnificence by the architecture. One unique feature is that rather than wandering through the stacks as you please, you give a slip with your request to a librarian, who retrieves the item for you.

As Dr. Gauger points out, DNA is much like that: precious information is carefully stored to be retrieved and accessed as needed according to a precise protocol, all of it housed in an architectural masterpiece.

Dr. Gauger delves into transcription and translation and the speed with which these processes take place. The cell is a wonder, and even more so when you consider that all that organization and information came about by a random process of matter blindly swishing and bumping up against itself — just like the Library of Congress.

Inside the Cell: DNA as a Library

979
Ann Gauger
January 25, 2017
On this episode of ID the Future, CSC Senior Fellow Ann Gauger discusses the library of the cell. She delves into transcription and translation and the speed with which these processes take place. Listen in to learn more about the workings of the cell!

© Discovery Institute