Message from @dumblebore π
Discord ID: 498132333103153152
why do you think there is so much progress in forensic science?
it's because DNA evidence is considered one of the most reliable
I don't think you understand the complexity of DNA
I do
You don't
I'm a programmer
and?
lets presume DNA is a program
complex program to make stuff
I'm a biologist
I'm not sure what you think was mapped, but we don't understand how a person is made from DNA from the little mapping we did
We mailed the whole thing
sure we can say how one gene in the DNA sequence can be the cause of one thing, but we don't understand how the whole thing works together
Who doesnβt understand that? All of humanity, or just you?
Mapped
BS
its like mapping the world when you think its a globe
its mapped incorrectly
That's what they did in the 90s and 2000s
its mapped incorrectly
It's a simple thing of G-C A-T it's not that hard to sequence
Iβd also like to remind everybody that we knew how genes worked long before we discovered the DNA molecule.
(We meaning humanity in this case)
@The18thDoctor yeah u right but the bean monk didn't get it all
we have been manipulated genes in a rudimentary way to create various types of dogs
Yeah I wasnβt just referring to Mendel.
we have a very basic understanding of it
Being able to change genes and understanding how genes work are very, very different things.
and rudimentary is where we are, we are in the 21st century with that limitation on tech, in 1 K years, we will be much much more advanced and have a better understanding of it
We have manipulated genes to grow ears on mice, we have a complex understanding of it
presuming we don't have scientists who create bogus theories that everyone buys
I'm saying we have a rudimentary understanding of it
we don't understand the human brain, we don't understand how to fix DNA defects
Just because you don't know how it works doesn't make it impossible to learn, we know so much but you aren't looking it up
we understand less than we understand
lets presume we know about 2% of how DNA works, your trying to pass that off as a great knowledge
DNA defects are more often than not self correcting in mitosis, however if you are talking about meiosis we can correct there
2% is not alot
less than a slice of a pizza
How do you know itβs that small?