technologySometimes
a comparison helps us grasp the fantastic design in miniature in the living
world. Let’s start by looking at an outstanding achievement of man’s
technology, the silicon chip shown here in the photo.
This
chip is undoubtedly a brilliant feat of miniaturization. It requires enormous
amounts of skill and ingenuity to have so much information processing capacity
in an object small enough for an ant to hold in its jaws!
But
before we get too carried away, let’s scale down to something even smaller
than the ant itself, the common dust mite—smaller than a pin-head.
Even
smaller, E.coli bacteria can be clustered on the surface of a pin point.
We have now scaled down to a level which is dramatically smaller than the
silicon chip, and what we are looking at is these amazing biological machines.
Each one of these bacteria is a single cell with capabilities which outstrip
anything our technology has been able to put together. Among its many
astonishing
features
is the ability to make a complete copy of itself in only a few minutes!
The
image to the left is a close-up view, going even further down in size, of these E.
coli bacteria. We’ve now left the silicon chip far, far behind in
miniaturization. Within each of these bacterial cells is their most
‘high-tech’ feature, namely their ‘central command module’—the
amazingly designed DNA molecule, with its incredible capacity to store
information.
Below
is a stylized reconstruction of a small portion of the strand of DNA,
magnified still further. Each strand is so thin that if you drew out a pinhead
with a 2mm diameter till it was a wire as thin as DNA, the wire would be long
enough to go around the equator 33 times!1
This fantastic
molecule is so way, way beyond the capacity of even our most advanced
information storage systems as to almost defy our capacity to describe it. It
represents the highest storage density of anything on Earth, i.e. the highest
amount of information which can be packed into a given space.
To
help understand this, note that the amount of information in one strand2
of human DNA is the same as that in 1,000 books of small print, each around 500
pages thick. Now imagine the total information carried in every human being on
Earth—that of one human multiplied five or six thousand million times. If all
that information were stored on DNA and packed into one volume, it would be no
bigger than a couple of aspirin tablets!3
The
silicon chip, for all the intelligent effort it represents, has now vanished
into insignificance next to God’s design achievements. It seems unnecessary to
point out that such things are not the result of chance evolution.
The
Bible says (Romans
1:20) that all who reject God are without excuse; the things He has made
testify clearly to His incredible intelligence and power.
1.
Source: Information scientist Dr
Werner Gitt, in Faszination Mensch (in English as The
Wonder of Man.
2.
Regarding the whole genome as one strand, regardless of the fact that it
is broken up into 23 chromosomes.
3.
Source: French cytogeneticist Jerome LeJeune, famous for discovering the
cause of Down’s Syndrome, in Anthropotes, Rivista di studi sulla persona e
la famiglia, Citta Nuova Editrice, 1989. This is also confirmed by
calculations supplied by Dr Werner Gitt, whose book In
the Beginning was Information inspired this article.