- #1
KenJackson
- 63
- 10
Our bodies are made up of tens of thousands of proteins, each of which is a long precise sequence of amino acid molecules ("residues"). Evolution requires them to be "formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications."
Does this mean the code for one of the twenty residues was added every few generations to the DNA coding for the protein until it was complete? But how would each generation know if the selected addition was correct, since partial proteins don't work whether correct or not? Also, natural selection removes stuff that doesn't work.
It seems like the rules conflict. What am I missing?
Does this mean the code for one of the twenty residues was added every few generations to the DNA coding for the protein until it was complete? But how would each generation know if the selected addition was correct, since partial proteins don't work whether correct or not? Also, natural selection removes stuff that doesn't work.
It seems like the rules conflict. What am I missing?