Signature in the Cell by Stephen C. Meyer
This is
not just a book promoting Intelligent Design (ID); one filled with thought experiments
and just-so-stories—that is what his evolutionary counterparts are stuck on.
Stephen C. Meyer has constructed a mathematically rigorous defense of ID as a scientific
concept. Meyer is convinced that the only possible explanation for the
existence of the complex information storage systems in the genetic code is that
it was designed by an intelligent agent. Listeners of the book will know that
he goes out of his way to distance ID from any taint of theism. When Meyer is
through you will certainly know that the possibility of the information
carrying capacity of the biological cell arising on its own, without any
guiding influence, is so vanishingly small that you will be able to sympathize
with the materialistic evolutionists who have resorted to the Multiple Universe
theory to literally justify their existence as thinking beings. And Meyer has
an answer for the Multi-verse as well. This is a difficult listen and requires
the listener to pay close attention. It would be of some benefit to anyone who
has had some exposure to the study of origins and also has a strong interest in
genetic information storage systems.
The information
on the Epilogue (Audible chapter 22) contains new information about the
incredible nested storage capacity of the DNA molecule. One of the facts I found
interesting is that a single sequence in the DNA strand can be used by many
different protein coding genes to code for thousands of different proteins. This
exacerbates the point-mutation problem of Neo-Darwinists to the degree that one
mutation could affect many, many proteins. Another fact I found enlightening is
that a gene can utilize DNA information on several different chromosomes.
Derek Shetterly is a fine narrator for the technical material in this book.
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