How is that different than any other molecule?
Because it's coded digital information. They recognized the difference over 50 years ago.
Same semantics and syntactic information as found here:
2H2 + O2 -----> 2H2O
Nice try, but 2H2 + O2 ----> 2H2O is using the semantic and syntatic information of the English language. Whereas the semantic and syntatic information is a
property of the genetic code itself. It has it's own coding and translation machinery within a cell, we only translate it to English to study it.
I keep hearing these terms thrown around, but I have yet to see specified complexity ever measured for anything in biology.
It was a big deal in 2012 when they published this:
These analyses portray a
complex landscape of long-range gene–element connectivity across ranges of hundreds of kilobases to several megabases, including interactions among unrelated genes (Supplementary Fig. 1, section Y).
Furthermore, in the 5C results, 50–60% of long-range interactions occurred in only one of the four cell lines, indicative of a high degree of tissue
specificity for gene–element connectivity49.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v489/n7414/full/nature11247.html
As it turns out, evolution increases information as defined by Shannon.
Nucleic Acids Res. 2000 Jul 15; 28(14): 2794–2799.
Evolution of biological information
Thomas D. Schneider:
Abstract
How do genetic systems gain information by evolutionary processes? Answering this question precisely requires a robust, quantitative measure of information. Fortunately, 50 years ago Claude Shannon defined information as a decrease in the uncertainty of a receiver. For molecular systems, uncertainty is closely related to entropy and hence has clear connections to the Second Law of Thermodynamics. These aspects of information theory have allowed the development of a straightforward and practical method of measuring information in genetic control systems.
Here this method is used to observe information gain in the binding sites for an artificial ‘protein’ in a computer simulation of evolution. The simulation begins with zero information and, as in naturally occurring genetic systems, the information measured in the fully evolved binding sites is close to that needed to locate the sites in the genome. The transition is rapid, demonstrating that information gain can occur by punctuated equilibrium.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC102656/
"evolution increases information defined y Shannon" So what? Do you understand adding information and adding functional information are two different things?
Also, "ev" is a computer simulation. It was designed to search a space for a target and finds said target. It's not a true blind or unguided search.
Just as it should take 150 million Powerball lottery drawings to get just one winner since the odds of winning are 1 in 150 million.
Behe is drawing the bulls eye around the bullet hole. He ignores the trillions of dual functional mutations that didn't fix. He is trying to calculate the odds of something happening after it already happened, which is nonsense.
That was a study of population genetics by Cornell university, not Behe. Not surprisingly they didn't agree with Behe's calculations and methods. So they repeated Behe's calculations using evolutionist methods. Their calculations showed it would take 162 million years for two coordinated mutations to occur and fix within humans. Which flies in the face of Darwinian evolution producing macro-evolutionary changes, thus the clue in the title "..and the limits to Darwinian evolution". It's a post-Darwin world.
I do. Why don't you? Why do you ignore all of the scientists that state quite clearly that life evolved?
You said "It would be nice if you used real scientific sources instead of creationist sites devoted to propaganda." Why is why I asked if you thought "Science" was a real scientific source. The source I cited was "Science".
I've never denied life evolved. I accept the theory of evolution as true. It's the theory of common descent I doubt since common design fits that pattern better.