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Our future, our universe, and other weighty topics


Monday, February 15, 2016

The Gigantic Missing Link of Biological Life

The discovery of DNA was one of the great triumphs of science. But ever since this discovery there has been a strange trend which we may call “DNA inflation,” “DNA exaggeration,” or even “DNA apotheosis.” The trend has been to carelessly describe DNA in ever more grandiose terms, regardless of the actual facts. A particularly absurd and careless example of such talk is found on page 31 of the book “Super Genes” by Deepak Chopra and Rudolph E. Tanzi. The authors write the following:

DNA, as the “brain” of the cell, is ultimately in charge of every process...The DNA that's neatly tucked inside each cell is something magnificent, a complex combination of chemicals and proteins that holds the entire past, present, and future of all life on our planet.

This is almost completely inaccurate. DNA is nothing like a brain, and is not even like a computer. DNA is not a “combination of chemicals and proteins,” because it does not contain a single protein. Instead DNA contains chemical information used by the body when it makes proteins. And DNA does not contain “the entire past, present, and future of all life on our planet.”

A statement this outrageous is not very common, but it is very common for writers to inaccurately describe DNA. One very common claim is that DNA is a blueprint that lays out the complete specification of the human body. Another common claim is that DNA is a recipe (or a library of recipes) for making an organism. It is also sometimes claimed that DNA is like a computer program for generating our bodies.

An example of a Darwinist biologist shamelessly telling this gigantic lie is the utterly deceptive statement made below by French biologist Francois Jacob on page 313 in his 1970 book "The Logic of Life: A History of Heredity":

"The formation of a man from an egg is a marvel of exactitude and precision. How can millions of cells emerge, in specialized lineages, in perfect order in time and space, from a single cell? This baffles the imagination. During embryonic development, the instructions contained in the chromosomes of the egg are gradually translated and executed, determining when and where the thousands of molecular species that constitute the body of an adult are to be formed. The whole plan of growth, the whole series of operations to be carried out, the order and the site of syntheses and their coordination are all written down in the nucleic-acid message." 

This was all a huge fiction, written decades before the Human Genome Project had even started to analyze the contents of DNA. Jacob's ideological motivation in telling this lie is made rather clear by the quotation he gives at the very beginning of this book, where he quotes Diderot as saying this:

"Do you see this egg? With it you can overthrow all the schools of theology, all the churches of the earth." 

Such statements about DNA are not warranted by the facts. Judging from the facts, we must conclude that while DNA uses a code of symbolic representations (the genetic code), DNA is not a blueprint for making a human, is not a recipe for making a human, and is not a program or algorithm for making a human. The facts indicate the DNA is not anything close to a complete specification of an organism, but that DNA is instead something much simpler, mainly just a kind of database used in making particular parts of an organism.

Below are 6 reasons for thinking that DNA is neither a blueprint nor a recipe nor a program for making human beings.

Reason #1: The “language” used by DNA is a minimal feature-poor language lacking any grammar or capability for expressing anything like a blueprint, a recipe, a program or an algorithm for making a human being.

First, let's look at the different ways of specifying a three-dimensional object, and then look at whether any such way could be used by using DNA.

There are two ways in which you can create a specification for building something that will exist as a three-dimensional object. The first way is the blueprint approach, in which you don't specify the steps that must be taken to create the object, but merely specify how the object will look once it is constructed. You can create a kind of blueprint by creating a drawing or image that will specify how the completed object should look. Alternately, you can specify three-dimensional coordinates for each of the parts that will make up the final object. The latter approach is used by video games and in the fancy special effects used in movies. A video game may store a 3D object as a series of 3D coordinates, and then use such coordinates to construct the object virtually.

A different approach for telling how to make a three-dimensional object is what we may call the recipe approach or the algorithm approach. When this approach is used, you merely specify a list of ingredients or parts and a list of steps or operations that will be taken using such ingredients or parts. For example, you might specify steps for making a house without using any blueprint for the house. You could specify a list of building materials and a list of exact operations to be performed on those building materials – a set of instructions. If the set of instructions was sufficiently detailed, they might be sufficient to produce some exact type of house.

But the “language” used by DNA is a minimal type of language that lacks any capability for using either of these approaches. Instead of being a rich language capable of great expression, the language used by DNA is pretty much the poorest, most “bare bones” type of language you can imagine. It's a language unsuitable for purposes other than stating lists of chemicals.

Let's look at exactly how the “language” of DNA works (and I used the word “language” in quotation marks because the expression capability is so limited that it may be an exaggeration to even say that it uses a language). DNA is a molecule containing many nucleotide base pairs, as shown in the diagram below. The base pairs can be either adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, or uracil

Combination of these “letters” of the DNA alphabet are used to represent particular amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. You have to look at a diagram of the genetic code to understand how particular combinations of these base pairs stand for particular amino acids.

Now this “language” is incredibly constrained. Basically the only thing that you can specify with it are lists of amino acids. To get an idea of how limited this is, imagine if you never learned more than 20 words from your parents or teachers, each the name of some food. Your powers of expression would then be incredibly limited. You might be able to describe some kind of sandwich you wanted by saying something like this:

bread
tomato
lettuce
hamburger
bread

But you absolutely could not specify something like a plan for making a building, a complex machine, or a complex 3D object consisting of many parts existing in different coordinates in three dimensional space.

And so it is for DNA. The “language” used by DNA is effectively 24 words or fewer. Twenty of those words are nouns, each an amino acid. The only verbs are something like the words “start” and “stop,” and possibly also “use” and “ignore.” I include those two words because scientists say that particular genes can be turned on or off.

The table below gives a schematic view of the DNA language. Strictly speaking the only verbs supported are “start” and “stop,” but I have also added “use” and “ignore” to cover the idea of genes that are switched on or switched off. 

You can practice at talking in the DNA language. Here is the algorithm:
  1. State any one of the twenty amino acids in the list above.
  2. Repeat step (1) any number of times.
  3. When you're done, say “Stop.”
Get the picture? Below are some examples of “talking in the DNA language.”

lysine, proline, lysine, valine, serine, tryrosine, stop.
tryosine, valine, proline, lysine, valine, serine, valine, tryrosine, stop

When you try this a few times, you may realize the very small powers of expression of this tiny little DNA mini-language.


Consider the “blueprint” approach of specifying a three dimensional object. A piece of DNA cannot specify that some particular body part should exist at some position in 3D space, because the DNA has absolutely no way of expressing positional coordinates. There is no way to say “behind,” “below,” “above,” or “in front of” using DNA, nor is there any way of specifying how much farther something might be behind, below or above something else. Not only is DNA language incapable of expressing where a nose should be located, the language also cannot even express the idea of a nose. All that DNA can do is to specify some proteins that might be used by the nose. Even that specification is incomplete, because DNA only tells which amino acids are used by a particular protein – it does not specify the shape of a protein (proteins typically have extremely complicated 3D shapes involving lots of folding and twisting).

But what about the “recipe” way of specifying something – can DNA do that by expressing a complex algorithm or list of steps such as we would need to have a program for making the human body? No, it cannot. Expressing an algorithm like that requires a language capability that DNA doesn't have. Consider types of instructions contained in recipes or algorithms:

Repeat this step 13 times
Keep doing this step until condition X is met
Keep doing this step but stop when condition Y is met
Position visible part X so that it is connected to visible part Y

Such ideas cannot be expressed by the “bare bones” language of DNA, which can only express lists of amino acids used to make proteins or nucleic acids.

It seems clear, then, that the language limitations of DNA mean that it cannot be something that expresses a blueprint for a human being or a recipe for making a human being. DNA is not a program for making a human.

Reason #2: Even if the “language” used by DNA had the capability of expressing a blueprint or recipe or program for making a human, there would be nothing that we know of capable of interpreting such instructions.

An important fact to consider is that a list of instructions is not sufficient by itself to cause something to get done. You always need some sophisticated agent smart enough to interpret the instructions and execute them. We know this is true for something like a food recipe. Obviously an apple pie won't get cooked just because you have an apple pie recipe on your table – you need a human smart enough to read those instructions and execute them. But what people sometimes forget is that something similar holds true even for computer code. If I write a computer program in some new language called Lingua, just putting that source code on my computer will never cause the program to run. I would also need to have on my machine a highly sophisticated piece of software called an interpreter, something that is reading each of those instructions, and causing some corresponding action to be taken.

What is the relevance of this to DNA? The relevance is that not only do we know of no capability that DNA's “language” has for specifying anything like a three-dimensional blueprint or an algorithm for making a visible three-dimensional object, but we also know of no capability in the body for interpreting such instructions if they existed. So in order for DNA to work as a program for generating the human body, we would need two things: (1) some capability by which DNA could express complex instructions for making visible three-dimensional objects (which are apparently completely beyond the limitations of DNA's feature-poor, minimalist language); (2) some other capability by some other unknown agent capable of acting as a highly sophisticated interpreter of these complex instructions. Neither of these things is known to exist.

It would seem, therefore, that the idea that DNA acts as a program or algorithm for generating the human body is not just impossible, but doubly impossible.

Reason #3: Despite cataloging the entire human genome, and exhaustively analyzing it, scientists have not discovered any part of DNA where a blueprint of the human body or a recipe for making humans is stored.

The Human Genome Project was a federally funded project that completed in April, 2003, after cataloging the entire human genome (all parts of DNA). It was followed up a federally funded ENCODE project designed to further analyze DNA. The results were gradually released over the next decade. Now with all this exhaustive study and analysis, we would expect that if there existed such a thing as a blueprint for the human body in DNA or a recipe for making the human body in DNA, that it would have been discovered. But no such thing has been discovered. We have discovered in DNA mainly just a list of chemicals used in constructing proteins, not anything like a specification specifying the body plan of humans or how to construct the intricate machinery of the human body.

When we look at the genes that are most commonly cited as something that may constitute something like body plan information, we find meager evidence indeed: the murky case of what are called hox genes. It has been claimed that hox genes “control the body plan of an embryo along the cradial-caudal (head-tail) axis” by means of a tiny area called the homebox. But the evidence for this claim is very weak. Geneticist Jerry Coyne says this about hox genes: “Their overall function in development - let alone in evolution - remains murky.”

I may note that the “homeobox” supposedly having some relevance to the human body plan is only 180 nucleotides long (the equivalent of about 60 words in the DNA language). This is millions of times too small to store anything like a plan for the human body.

The unwarranted claims about Hox genes are summarized by Joseph Hannon Bozorgmehr at the Laboratory of Systems Biology and Bioinformatics at the University of Manchester (author of this scientific paper).  Bozorgmehr writes the following :

Genes code for proteins and RNAs. They don't code for brains, limbs or body plans. Yet many scientists insist that Hox genes, and other transcription factors, are responsible for "laying out the floor plan" of the organism when all they are observed to do is activate genes in already established segments of the developing embryo. We have known this for 20 years. So why are the 39 Hox genes still portrayed as determining the geometry of anatomy when all they do is bind to DNA and RNA polymerase to affect gene expression in ontogeny?

The meager and murky evidence regarding hox genes notwithstanding, our scientists have not found any clear evidence that DNA stores a blueprint for the human body, a recipe for the human body, or any type of program or algorithm like a body plan. If DNA stored such a thing, there would be abundant evidence of it.

In the short video below, Jonathan Wells (a PhD in molecular and cell biology from the University of California at Berkeley) states very clearly that DNA does not map out a body plan. He states “the body plan, as far as we know, is not in the DNA” (0:33), and states that DNA is “not a blueprint, it's more like a parts list” (1:40). 



Reason #4: If DNA stored a human blueprint or human recipe or body plan, humans would have a much larger DNA than simpler organisms; instead, the opposite is often true.

If body plans are stored in DNA, we should expect that the size of an organism's DNA should be proportional to the size and complexity of an organism. For the same reasons that the blueprints of a skyscraper use much more paper than the blueprints for a house, under a “DNA has the body plan” assumption we should think that the human DNA is much bigger than the size of, say, any flowering plant. But astonishingly, the opposite is true. The chart here shows the relative size of the DNA in different organisms. We see that the size of the DNA (in base pairs) in mammals is much smaller than the size of the DNA of many amphibians and flowering plants. We see on this logarithmic chart that the DNA of some amphibians and flowerings plants holds ten times more information than the DNA of humans.

A related comparison is the number of genes in the DNA. According to this link, rice has between 32,000 and 50,000 genes, while humans have only 20,251 genes. That's the opposite of what we would expect if DNA stored body plans.

Reason #5: The DNA size of humans is insufficient to be a blueprint or recipe for the human body with all its complexities.

Astonishingly our biologists have sometimes assumed that DNA is a complete specification for constructing a human body, but I have never once read a biologist consider whether the information size of DNA is sufficient for such a task. The idea that DNA can store a complete specification for a human being will obviously make no sense if our DNA molecules are not big enough to store such a specification, just as it will make no sense to assume that a postcard can store the names of all members of a club if the club has many thousands of members.

It has been estimated that a DNA molecule has an information size of about 700 megabytes. This is not big enough to store a complete blueprint, algorithm, or program for creating a human being. If you use the uncompressed RAW files used in cameras, it will take about 8 megabytes to store a high resolution photo. This means human DNA has an information size needed to store about 100 high-resolution photos uncompressed. This is not big enough to store a complete specification for making the human body. A recently introduced CT scanner requires 320 scans to map a human body, each scan equivalent to such an 8 megabyte photo. But consider also all the microscopic functionality that would need to be specified, and all of the microscopic details. It would seem that it would require many gigabytes to store a complete plan for building a human, not just 700 megabytes.

Reason #6: If DNA stored a recipe or blueprint for making humans, we would probably sometimes see extremely jumbled bodies resulting from mutations, but we don't see such “scrambled humans.”

This is the weakest of my six reasons, so I'll discuss it only briefly. All parts of DNA are subject to mutations in which random changes occur because of things such as copying errors and cosmic rays hitting part of DNA. If DNA stored the human body plan, it seems that we should expect to see weird examples of “scrambled humans,” such as people born with eyes on their cheeks, people with noses on their chins, people born with ears on their foreheads, and so forth. But we don't see such abnormalities. Genetic mutations can produce serious abnormalities, but the human body seems to be implemented with astonishingly fidelity, more so than we would expect if the body plan for humans was stored in DNA subject to mutations.

The Gigantic Missing Link of Life

The reasons discussed above strongly argue that DNA is not a blueprint, recipe or specification for making a human being. Does this mean that there is nothing like a body plan for making a human? Not at all. Such a plan must exist somewhere. But we don't know where it is located. It does not exist in DNA. Widely described as “the secret of life,” DNA must instead be only one secret of life. There must be some other equally great secret that we have not discovered.

This undiscovered secret – the unknown location of the specification for making a human being – is the gigantic missing link of biological life that we have not discovered.

Where might such information be stored? It might possibly be stored somewhere else in the body, or it might be stored outside of the body. It may well be that the answer lies in some field or force or influence or information system entirely unknown to us.

This gigantic missing link of life can most mysteriously be seen at the moment of life's conception. Once a tiny female ovum has been fertilized by a sperm, how does this fertilized egg know how to turn into a human baby, rather than a million other possible forms? There is absolutely not in DNA any mechanism by which an egg or an embryo can look up a list of instructions to follow based on its age. An egg or an embryo doesn't know how old it is, and doesn't know where to look in DNA to look up appropriate instructions; and DNA does not have instructions organized by biological age, which might be looked up by some egg or embryo that knew its age. DNA has everything written in a language of about 22 words in which 20 of those words are amino acids – not something remotely suitable for stating any instructions other than protein or RNA assembly instructions.

As Jonathan Wells (a PhD in molecular and cell biology) states near the end of this lengthy scientific paper:

"The idea that embryo development is controlled by a genetic program is inconsistent with the biological evidence. Embryo development requires far more ontogenetic information than is carried by DNA sequences."

The problem of how a fertilized egg can progress to a baby is called the problem of morphogenesis. It is an unsolved mystery that modern biology has not given enough attention. The complete answer must involve much more than just DNA, and we have every reason to suspect that it involves something utterly mysterious that we know little or nothing about. Until this mystery is solved, we cannot plausibly claim that we understand either life or evolution.

Postscript:  My point about morphogenesis and evolution is pretty much reiterated in this book "Morphogenesis and Evolution," where Keith Stewart Thomson (president of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia) stated the following (at the beginning of Chapter 7):

"J. Maynard Smith (1983) has written that 'although we have a clear and highly articulated theory of evolution, we have no comparable theory of development.'  I would turn this statement around somewhat and say that until we have a general theory of development we are unlikely to be able to derive a complete theory of evolution."

Correct, and you could just as easily change that phrase "complete theory of evolution" to "plausible theory of what drives evolution." 

In this .pdf file, a professor of Mathematical Biology makes this statement:

"Although genes obviously play a role in development, knowing the genetic make-up of an organism does not allow us to understand the mechanisms of development—we may know that certain genes impart particular properties to certain cells, but how this then leads to tissue-level behaviour cannot be addressed by genetics."

That is basically a fancy way of saying that a fertilized egg does not become a baby by following a body plan stored in DNA. 

On page 26 of the recent book The Developing Genome, Professor David S. Moore states, "The common belief that there are things inside of us that constitute a set of instructions for building bodies and minds -- things that are analogous to 'blueprints' or 'recipes' -- is undoubtedly false." The same expert (in a paper claiming massive misuse by others of the term "heritability") states, "Our DNA, we now know, does not contain specific blueprint-like instructions about traits." 

Biologist Rupert Sheldrake says this about this issue:

"DNA only codes for the materials from which the body is constructed: the enzymes, the structural proteins, and so forth. There is no evidence that it also codes for the plan, the form, the morphology of the body. To see this more clearly, think of your arms and legs. The form of the arms and legs is different; it's obvious that they have a different shape from each other. Yet the chemicals in the arms and legs are identical. The muscles are the same, the nerve cells are the same, the skin cells are the same, and the DNA is the same in all the cells of the arms and legs. In fact, the DNA is the same in all the cells of the body. DNA alone cannot explain the difference in form; something else is necessary to explain form."

An evolutionary biologist notes that "the long-held belief that genes are the unique determinants of biological form in development and evolution has been challenged by an extensive number of commentators."  Among these "extensive number of commentators" are the people mentioned above and the authors of this scientific paper, who note that "gene expression patterns cannot explain the development of the precise geometry of an organism and its parts in space."

Describing conclusions of biologist Brian Goodwin, the New York Times says, "While genes may help produce the proteins that make the skeleton or the glue, they do not determine the shape and form of an embryo or an organism." Massimo Pigliucci (mainstream author of numerous scientific papers on evolution) has stated  that "old-fashioned metaphors like genetic blueprint and genetic programme are not only woefully inadequate but positively misleading." Neuroscientist Romain Brette states, "The genome does not encode much except for amino acids."

In a 2016 scientific paper, three scientists state the following:

"It is now clear that the genome does not directly program the organism; the computer program metaphor has misled us...The genome does not function as a master plan or computer program for controlling the organism; the genome is the organism's servant, not its master....Metaphorically, we can think of the genome as akin to a list of words, a vocabulary, which can be used to build and express a meaningful language; like a vocabulary, a genome by itself has no functional meaning. The genome is thus akin to a toolbox of DNA sequences that provide molecular tools as requested by the internal state of the organism and the state of the environment. One's genes cannot explain one's being: an organism is the expression of a dynamic and ongoing interaction between the state of its environment and its internal state, which includes its past history and its toolbox of DNA sequences."

In the book Mind in Life by Evan Thompson (published by the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press) we read the following on page 180: "The plain truth is that DNA is not a program for building organisms, as several authors have shown in detail (Keller 2000, Lewontin 1993, Moss 2003)." C.H. Waddington is described by wikipedia.org as "a British developmental biologist, paleontologist, geneticist, embryologistand philosopher who laid the foundations for systems biology, epigenetics, and evolutionary developmental biology."  He stated, "The DNA is not a program or sequentially accessed control over the behavior of the cell." Scientist Jean Krivine presents here a very elaborate visual presentation with the title, "Epigenetics, Aging and Symmetry or why DNA is not a program." Scientists Walker and Davies state this in a scientific paper:

"DNA is not a blueprint for an organism; no information is actively processed by DNA alone. Rather, DNA is a passive repository for transcription of stored data into RNA, some (but by no means all) of which goes on to be translated into proteins."

Geneticist Adam Rutherford states that "DNA is not a blueprint," a statement also made by biochemistry professor Keith Fox. "DNA is not a blueprint for an organism," states Templeton Prize-winning physicist and astrobiologist P. C. W. Davies. A press account of the thought of geneticist Sir Alec Jeffreys states, "DNA is not a blueprint, he says."  B.N. Queenan (the Executive Director of Research at the NSF-Simons Center for Mathematical & Statistical Analysis of Biology at Harvard University) tells us this:

"DNA is not a blueprint. A blueprint faithfully maps out each part of an envisioned structure. Unlike a battleship or a building, our bodies and minds are not static structures constructed to specification."

"The genome is not a blueprint," says Kevin Mitchell, a geneticist and neuroscientist at Trinity College Dublin. "It doesn't encode some specific outcome."  His statement was reiterated by another scientist. "DNA cannot be seen as the 'blueprint' for life," says Antony Jose, associate professor of cell biology and molecular genetics at the University of Maryland. He says, "It is at best an overlapping and potentially scrambled list of ingredients that is used differently by different cells at different times."  Sergio Pistoi (a science writer with a PhD in molecular biology) tells us, "DNA is not a blueprint," and tells us, "We do not inherit specific instructions on how to build a cell or an organ." Michael Levin (director of a large biology research lab) states that "genomes are not a blueprint for anatomy," and after referring to a "deep puzzle" of how biological forms arise, he gives this example: "Scientists really don’t know what determines the intricate shape and structure of the flatworm’s head."

Agustin Fuentes, a professor of anthropology, states the following:

"Genes play an important role in our development and functioning, not as directors but as parts of a complex system. 'Blueprints' is a poor way to describe genes. It is misleading to talk about genes as doing things by themselves."

In statements such as this, scientists "fess up" that the idea of DNA as a human specification is not true. Two other scientists "fess up" in a similar way when they write the following about genes in the journal Nature: "Population genetics is founded on a subset of coding sequences that can be related to phenotype in a statistical sense, but not based on causation or a viable causal mechanism."

Regarding the DNA as blueprint idea wikipedia.org article entitled “Common misunderstanding of genetics” lists the claim that “Genes are a blueprint of an organism's form and behavior” as one of the “common misunderstandings of genetics.” Jonathan Latham has a master's degree in Crop Genetics and a PhD in virology. In his essay “Genetics Is Giving Way to a New Science of Life,” a long essay well worth a read, Latham exposes many of the myths about DNA being a blueprint or master controller, and points out DNA does not even fully specify a protein. He states, "It is habitually, but lazily, presumed that DNA specifies all the information necessary for the formation of a protein, but that is not true." 

Ian Stevenson M.D. cited quite a few biologists pointing out the genes and DNA cannot determine the form of an organism:

"Genes alone - which provide instructions for the production of amino acids and proteins -- cannot explain how the proteins produced by their instructions come to have the shape they develop and, ultimately, determine the form of the organisms where they are. Biologists who have drawn attention to this important gap in our knowledge of form have not been a grouping of mediocrities (Denton, 1986; Goldschmidt, 1952; B. C. Goodwin, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1994; Gottlieb, 1992; Grasse, 1973; E. S. Russell...Sheldrake, 1981; Tauber and Sarkar, 1992; Thompson, 1917/1942)."

Biologist B.C. Goodwin stated this in 1989: "Since genes make molecules, genetics...does not tell us how the molecules are organized into the dynamic, organized process
that is the living organism."  paper by Stuart A. Newman (a professor of cell biology and anatomy) discussing at length the work of scientists trying to evoke "self-organization" as an explanation for morphogenesis states that "public lectures by principals of the field contain confidently asserted, but similarly oversimplified or misleading treatments," and says that "these analogies...give the false impression that there has been more progress in understanding embryonic development than there truly has been." Referring to scientists moving from one bunk explanation of morphogenesis to another bunk explanation for it, the paper concludes by stating, "It would be unfortunate if we find ourselves having emerged from a period of misconceived genetic program metaphors only to land in a brave new world captivated by equally misguided ones about self-organization."

Referring to claims there is a program for building organisms in DNA, biochemist F. M. Harold stated "reflection on the findings with morphologically aberrant mutants suggests that the metaphor of a genetic program is misleading." Referring to  self-organization (a vague phrase sometimes used to try to explain morphogenesis), he says, "self-organization remains nearly as mysterious as it was a century ago, a subject in search of a paradigm." 

Physician James Le Fanu states the following:

"The genome projects were predicated on the reasonable assumption that spelling out the full sequence of genes would reveal the distinctive genetic instructions that determine the diverse forms of life. Biologists were thus understandably disconcerted to discover that precisely the reverse is the case. Contrary to all expectations, there is a near equivalence of 20,000 genes across the vast spectrum of organismic complexity, from a millimetre-long worm to ourselves. It was no less disconcerting to learn that the human genome is virtually interchangeable with that of both the mouse and our primate cousins...There is in short nothing in the genomes of fly and man to explain why the fly has six legs, a pair of wings and a dot-sized brain and that we should have two arms, two legs and a mind capable of comprehending the history of our universe."

The false claim that DNA is a blueprint or recipe for making a human was denounced by Ken Richardson, formerly Senior Lecturer in Human Development at the Open University. In an article in the mainstream Nautilus science site, Richardson stated the following:

"Scientists now understand that the information in the DNA code can only serve as a template for a protein. It cannot possibly serve as instructions for the more complex task of putting the proteins together into a fully functioning being, no more than the characters on a typewriter can produce a story."

Writing in the leading journal Cell, biologists  Marc Kirschner, John Gerhart and Tim Mitchison stated"The genotype, however deeply we analyze it, cannot be predictive of the actual phenotype, but can only provide knowledge of the universe of possible phenotypes." That's equivalent to saying that DNA does not specify visible biological structures, but merely limits what structure an organism can have (just as a building parts list merely limits what structures can be made from the set of parts). paper co-authored by a chemistry professor (Jesper Hoffmeyer) tells us this: "Ontogenetic 'information,' whether about the structure of the organism or about its behavior, does not exist as such in the genes or in the environment, but is constructed in a given developmental context, as critically emphasized, for example, by Lewontin (1982) and Oyama (1985)." Biologist Steven Rose has stated, "DNA is not a blueprint, and the four dimensions of life (three of space, one of time) cannot be read off from its one-dimensional strand."

At the Stack Exchange expert answers site, someone posted a question asking which parts of a genome specify how to make a cell (he wanted to write a program that would sketch out a cell based on DNA inputs).  An unidentified expert stated that it is "not correct" that DNA is a blueprint that describes an organism, and that "DNA is not a blueprint because DNA does not have instructions for how to build a cell." No one contradicted this expert's claim, even though the site allows any of its experts to reply. On page 26 of his book Biology as Ideology: The Doctrine of DNA, biologist Richard C. Lewontin stated this:

"We are not determined by our genes, although surely we are influenced by them...Even if I knew the complete molecular specification of every gene in an organism, I could not predict what that organism would be....Even if I knew the genes of a developing organism and the complete sequence of its environments, I could not specify that organism."

Post-postscriptThe term "body plan" is a profoundly misleading term that biologists love to use, a term that opens the door to deceptions about DNA. In biology literature the term "body plan" has a very limited meaning, something vastly different from a complete plan for constructing an organism. According to a scientific paper "a body plan is a suite of characters shared by a group of phylogenetically related animals at some point during their development." The wikipedia.org article on "body plan" tells us this: "body planBauplan (German plural Baupläne), or ground plan is a set of morphological features common to many members of a phylum of animals." 

According to this definition, all chordates (including men, bears, dogs and fish) have the same body plan. So when biologists talk about "the human body plan" they
are merely referring to the common characteristics of all chordates, including men, bears, dogs and fish:  basically just the existence of a backbone and bilateral symmetry (having the same things on both sides of the body).  They are not referring to the structure of the 200 types of cells in the human body, or the structure of internal organs, and are not referring to the dynamic intricacies of human physiology. But anyone hearing the term "body plan" will think the term referred to a complete specification of a human body.  So, most misleadingly, biologists may say that this or that "determines the body plan," when all they mean is the beginning of a bilateral organism with a backbone, something a thousand times simpler than the final product of the internally dynamic and enormously organized human body.  This is as misleading as someone saying that he has built a starship, when he has merely built a boat in the shape of a star.  

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  1. To clarify something if genes do not make up the form of an organism then how come you can determine some ones eye color through genetics.

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  3. Eye color is not an example of the form of something. The form of something is how its parts are arranged or organized. Similarly, you do not change your biological form when you get a suntan, nor would you change it if you coated yourself in some colored liquid.

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    1. A genome can be roughly compared to a low-level parts list. Changing a parts list can certainly affect the form or appearance of something. For example, if you change the parts list for a skyscraper to use soft taffy girders rather than steel girders, you will sure change the form, preventing a very tall height. But a parts list does not specify the architecture or structure or parts arrangement of something. A parts list for a skyscraper is not a blueprint for how to make the skyscraper, and a genome is not a blueprint for how to accomplish the incomparably harder job of constructing a human body.

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  4. Thank you for clarifying. it was a logical error on my part.

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