good response I disagree that DNA magically forms however,
I did not say it magically forms. I said it forms following standard basic chemical/physical rules. In fact sort of like the same rules that "create" ice crystals in your freezer.
The coded information, organized in small sets called "bytes" in binary computer code and "codons" in the DNA of living organisms, is able to tolerate some mutations. But the study's authors show that these mutations must occur within the boundaries of the error-correction systems or the whole programor whole organismwill be irreparably harmed.
Think about this for a second: if there wasn't a system by which the structure would collapse under virtually no stress, would it be here today?
But remember, you started off asking about DNA, not "error correction". I answered the point about DNA and it's development, while DNA is very cool and fascinating, it doesn't utilize ANYTHING that isn't basic chemistry which equally applies to all other chemicals.
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