Random ramblings from an amateur rock-n-roll historian and critic,self-professed bourbon aficionado, blackberry growin', jam makin', sometime tie-die shirt makin', ex hippie wannabe, turned punk rock lovein', blues festival going, middle aged pudgy bald white guy who loves to wear Hawaiian shirts in the summertime and happens to be more Stax than Motown, more Alman Brothers than Skynard, more Stones than Beatles, more NASCAR than Baseball, more freeware than license keys...
"God brewed it or moved upon the face of the waters and God said let there be 5:12 light and there was light and God saw the light and it was good and God divided the light from the darkness and God called the light day 5:19 and the Darkness he called night
and the evening
and the morning were day one
and we've talked about the fact that 5:24 that word Erev and Boker currently mean evening and morning but 5:30 may have meant something more General long long time ago and the terms of these the the reduction of entropy and 5:37 so on..."
"God brewed it or moved upon the face of the waters and God said let there be 5:12 light and there was light and God saw the light and it was good and God divided the light from the darkness and God called the light day 5:19 and the Darkness he called night
and the evening in the morning were day one
and we've talked about the fact that 5:24 that word Erev and Boker currently mean evening and morning but 5:30 may have meant something more General long long time ago and the terms of these the the reduction of entropy and 5:37 so on..."
that's a fiction today we know that's a that's a naïve statement
Michael Denton in 1986 the Australian evolutionist
published a key book on this he said:
"although the tiniest bacterial cells are incredibly small each is in effect a veritable micro miniaturized Factory containing thousands of exquisitely designed pieces of the intricate molecular Machinery made up of 100 billion atoms far more complicated than any machine built by man and absolutely without parallel in the non-living world"
"the simple cell its unparalleled complexity and it has:
an Adaptive design,
it has a central Memory Bank,
Central Library where the information is held,
it's filled with assembly plants and processing units
it has repacking and shipping centers
it has Robot machines in the form of protein molecules
that typically consists of about three thousand atoms
in three-dimensional configurations
and there are hundreds of thousands
of different types specific types of these things
it also has an elaborate communication system
with quality control procedures and repair mechanisms
"it even can muster armies to attack Invaders"
"The actual cell has a plasma membrane
which has gateways for for exchanges
it has signal receptors
so it can get message traffic
there's a cytoplasm
which is a fancy word for
when we don't know what it's made of
we have a nucleus
which is the information center
and that's where the master library is
that everybody else will consult inside
there's the nucleus which is the automated factories
and that's where they do the product Manufacturing
then you've got these power plants
which provide the energy for the city to work
it's like a miniature City
and then you have the Golgi apparatus
which processes packages handles
the shipping and prepares for export
and then you have all these little vesicules
which storage transport do trash disposal
they all have functions this is a veritable City")
That video of that cell was from four years ago.
And everybody was/is like:
"It's an animal cell"
Okay...Yeah...And?
It still couldnt have done
what we have been led to believe it did.
(And as stated above
they are found in Humans too.)
And then they say:
"Well its not an actual image."
Okay...Yeah...And?
WTF is your point?
It's still the best 3-D computer animation
of a cell we have.
"That viral "most detailed human cell" image is n photograph. It is a 3D scientific illustration called cellular landscape, built by visualizers at Digizym using data from X-ray crystallography, NMR, and cryo-electron microscopy. Each colored shape represents a real molecule or structure placed at roughly the correct size and location inside a cell.
A normal light microscope cannot capture this level of detail because many of these structures are smaller than the wavelength of visible light. Even advanced imaging techniques produce grayscale, noisy slices, not a full-color whole-cell view. Scientists and artists stitch thousands of molecular models together into one synthesized scene, the same way cartographers combine satellite data into a seamless map of Earth.
The image represents a single cell, and the human body contains around 37 trillion of them. Each one runs thousands of molecular machines simultaneously, repairing DNA, producing energy, and responding to signals every second.Projects like the Human Cell Atlas are now working to catalog every cell type in the body, essentially building a Google Maps for our biology."
No comments:
Post a Comment