DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

A Decade After Mapping the Genome, Scientists Scramble for More Imaging Data to Unravel Its Mysteries

3rd November 2014

Read it.

In other words, sequencing the human genome merely showed us that we had an overwhelming number of mysteries yet to decode. We were like toddlers handed a giant encyclopedia as a means of learning the facts of life – not only could we not read the book, we didn’t even know how many entries it contained.

One Response to “A Decade After Mapping the Genome, Scientists Scramble for More Imaging Data to Unravel Its Mysteries”

  1. Whitehawk Says:

    The incredible sophistication, the intricate self-regulating mechanisms, the encoded language that spells out a 3 tiered communication system and the fact that we are 10 years in and still pretty clueless all bode bad tidings for the “Theory of Evolution”. The system is so complex and sophisticated it is ridiculous to think it happened by chance. Johnathan Wells “The Myth of Junk DNA” is a great read. There are not sections of meaningless, redundant information. It all has a purpose and function. No “randomness” to the system unless there is a LOSS of information by mutation.