Rusky, the reason I did not answer your DNA post was that
a) I was asleep. I live in a different timezone than you.
b) It is so flawed, it hardly deserves an answer.
But, alas, I will try to humour you.
I am just taking one of your key arguments here to dissect.
(I assume it is key because you have repeated it several times)
"Computer Code (website) does not evolve, how could you think it does happen in real life organisms?"
Dissect it..well.. laugh it in the face, more likely.
You are comparing apples to shaving cream.
Just because the DNA has been called the "code" of living beings, it is very, very different from computer code.
Normally, computer code lacks the ability to evolve because of its makeup (electronic signals in a specific sequence, ordering a chip to....) in comparison to real DNA that posesses the ability to evolve because of its makeup (a complex sequence of chemical molecules that react with...).
Thus, real DNA mutates and changes under specific influences.
By the way, the mutations that evolutionary theory talks about are not only the ones brought forth by cosmic radiation, etc... They occur gradually over time.
Basically, you are probably a tiny bit different from your parents DNA. (The childs DNA is not only made up of the man and woman's in question, but might also have some random changes, due to the chemical process involved in putting it together.
If one of those tiny changes (you might be a bit smarter, or have longer reach, or maybe you can touch your nose with your tongue) leads to you being better suited to your environment (earn more money, reach better food higher up in the tree, impress the ladies), and thus to being able to foster more offspring, these changes
might be transferred to that offspring.
Of course, seeing these changes manifest in a big scale and a whole population will take a bit of time.
On the other hand, your thought experiment of "evolving code" has already been thought of decades ago and also been put to practice, sometimes with astonishing results.
It is one of the variations on artificial life.
Artificial life - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
You might also be interested in trying some yourself:
Darwin@Home
For a closing note:
- You are still not asking questions, you are turning into (or already have) a believer. To believe does not mean to ask questions, it means the opposite.
As a scientist, I do not believe in anything.
- It appears as if you are going down the path of many creationists, meaning you are beginning to see "science" as a big conspiracy, as some kind of organization with an agenda.
As a scientist, I hate to tell you this, but you will never find a more quarreling bunch always at war with each other than "science".
Why do we do this?
To prove each other wrong. To find the flaws in another scientist's arguments.
Why do we do this?
To get closer to the truth. To find the theories and arguments that can not be prove wrong, no matter how hard ANYONE might try.
So far, evolutionary theory has been holding up quite well.
Regards,
::emp::