The human
genome is comprised of two sets of 23 chromosomes - 46 chromosomes in all. Each
parent contributes a set. About 97 percent of the genome consists of sequences
that don't code for proteins and have no known function. Within the rest of the
genome are estimated 70,000 genes.
Is non-coding DNA expressing a Language?
In the March
1995 issue of "Scientific American", in the article titled
"Talking Trash" (see below), scientists claim to have found "word" patterns in the "junk" DNA of man. It seems that this junk DNA (segments of the DNA genome which do not encode instructions for the production of proteins) exhibits the same statistical patterns that are found in written languages.
"Talking Trash" (see below), scientists claim to have found "word" patterns in the "junk" DNA of man. It seems that this junk DNA (segments of the DNA genome which do not encode instructions for the production of proteins) exhibits the same statistical patterns that are found in written languages.
* * *
Talking Trash: What's in a Word?
What's in a
word? Several nucleotides, some researchers might say.
By applying statistical methods developed by linguists, investigators have found that "junk" parts of the genomes of many organisms may be expressing a language. These regions traditionally been regarded as 'useless' accumulations of material from millions of years of evolution.
By applying statistical methods developed by linguists, investigators have found that "junk" parts of the genomes of many organisms may be expressing a language. These regions traditionally been regarded as 'useless' accumulations of material from millions of years of evolution.
'The feeling
is,' says Boston University physicist Eugene Stanley, 'that there's something
going on in the non-coding region.'
"Junk
DNA" got its name because the nucleotides there (the fundamental pieces of
DNA, combined into so-called base pairs) do not encode instructions for making
proteins, the basis for life. In fact, the vast majority of genetic material in
organisms from bacteria to mammals consists of non-coding DNA segments, which
are interspersed with the coding parts. In humans, about 97 percent of the
genome is junk. Over the past 10 years biologists began to suspect that this
feature is not entirely trivial.
"It's
unlikely that every base pair in non-coding DNA is critical, but it is also
foolish to say that all of it is junk" notes Robert Tjian, a biochemist at
the University of California at Berkeley.
For
instance, studies have found that mutations in certain parts of the non-coding
regions lead to cancer. Physicists backed the suspicions a few years ago, when
those studying fractals noticed certain patterns in junk DNA. They found that
non-coding sequences display what are termed long-range correlations. That is,
the position of a nucleotide depends to some extent on the placement of other
nucleotides.
Their
patterns follow a fractal-like property called 1/f noise, which is inherent in
many physical systems that evolve over time, such as electronic circuits,
periodicity of earthquakes and even traffic patterns. In the genome, however,
the long-range correlations held only for the non-coding sequences; the coding
parts exhibited an uncorrelated pattern. Those signs suggested that junk DNA
might contain some kind of organized information. To decipher the message,
Stanley and his colleagues Rosario N. Mantegna, Sergey V. Buldyrev and Shlomo
Haviin collaborated with Amy L Goldberg, Chung-Kang Peng and Michael Simons of
Harvard Medical School.
They
borrowed from the work of linguist George K. Zipf who by looking at texts from
several languages ranked the frequency with which words occur. Plotting the
rank of words against those in a text produces a distinct relation. The most
common word "the" in English occurs 10 times, than the 10th most
common word, 100 times more often than the 100th most common, and so forth. The
researchers tested the relation on 40 DNA sequences of species ranging from
viruses to humans.
They then
grouped pairs of nucleotides to create words between three and eight pairs long
(it takes three pairs to specify an amino acid). In every case, they found
that non-coding regions followed the Zipf relation more closely than did coding
regions, suggesting that junk DNA follows the structure of languages.
"We
didn't expect the coding DNA to obey Zipf," Stanley notes. "A code
literal one if by land, two if by sea."
You can't
have any mistakes in a code. Language, in contrast, is a statistical,
structured system with built-in redundancies. A few mumbled words or scattered
typos usually do not render a sentence incomprehensible.
In fact, the
workers tested this notion of repetition by applying a second analysis, this
time from information theorist Claude E Shanon who in the 1950s quantified
redundancies in languages. They found that junk DNA contains three to four
times the redundancies of coding segments. Because of the statistical nature of
the results, the researchers admit their findings are unlikely to help
biologists identify functional aspects of junk DNA. Rather the work may
indicate something about efficient information storage.
"There
has to be some sort of hierarchical arrangement of the information to allow one
to use it in an efficient fashion and to have some adaptability and
flexibility," Goldberger observes.
Another
speculation is quences may be essential to the way DNA has to fold to fit into
the nucleus.
Some
researchers question whether the group has found anything significant.
One of those is Beniot Mandelbrot of Yale University. In the 1950s the mathematician pointed out that Zipf's law is a statistical numbers game that has little to do with recognizable language features, such as semantics. Moreover, he claims the group made several errors.
One of those is Beniot Mandelbrot of Yale University. In the 1950s the mathematician pointed out that Zipf's law is a statistical numbers game that has little to do with recognizable language features, such as semantics. Moreover, he claims the group made several errors.
'Their
evidence does not establish Zipf's law even remotely.' he says.
But such
criticisms are not stopping the Boston workers from trying to deciphers junk
DNA's tongue.
'It could be
a dead language,' Stanley says, 'but the search will be exciting.'
Source: Talking Trash: What's in a Word? Scientific
American Mar 95
* * *
Genetic Code, I Ching and Hebrew Alphabet
Since the
discovery of the DNA double helix molecule in the mid 1950's scientists have
been using "language" as a metaphor to help them understand the
structures and processes that express life at the bio-chemical level.
Current
research seems to imply that the metaphor may be more literal than previously
thought. Suppose that there are stretches of DNA embedded in the genome of man
that, when properly "decoded", speak to us in a human language. What
language would it be; and what would it say? My work points to the possibility
that the language may be Hebrew; or, perhaps, a Proto-Caananite precursor of
the Hebrew language.
My work
examines some of the evidence supporting that hypothesis. It is placed here in
the hope that it will stimulate discussion and further research. To read it and
"play" with it will require one to delve into, what is considered by
many to be, mutually exclusive categories of knowledge: science and "the
occult". Very few people will be able or willing to entertain the idea
that these two antithetical arenas of knowing can illuminate each other. I hope
to find a few people who can.
The I Ching is composed of 64 binary mathematical
patterns called hexagrams. Each hexagram is composed of six lines which may be
broken (yin) or solid (yang).
A number of
years ago I stumbled across a unique similarity of form between the genetic
code and a fusion of the Hebrew alphabet with the ancient Chinese divination
system of the I Ching, or "Book of Changes." I was
studying the I Ching when I came across a book(1) that demonstrated an
isomorphism between the 64 symbols of the I Ching (called hexagrams or kua) and
the 64 codons of the genetic code. I wondered if there might be, among the
mystic or occult systems of other cultures, a corresponding set of symbols for
the amino acids of the genetic code for which the 64 codons code. I turned to
the Hebrew occult system of Qabalah and discovered the Sefer Yetzirah or
"Book of Creation."(2)
The Sefer Yetzirah is the earliest known text of the
Qabalah. Its "magical" purpose is to educate the reader in the
process of creation using the Hebrew alphabet as The Creator did. Because the
22 trump cards (also called atu) of the Tarot system of divination have Hebrew
letters assigned to them, I thought that maybe I could compare the symbols,
images, and concepts in the Tarot trumps with the corresponding contents of the
I Ching kua. Then, if there are enough similarities, I could assign each of the
trumps to a group of I Ching kua. The result would be a Hebrew letter
assignment for each amino acid and punctuation codon in the genetic code.
The
assignment of the I Ching symbols to the nucleic acids of the genetic code is
based upon similarities of form and function between their respective domains
of knowledge. The assignment of Hebrew letters to the groups of I Ching kua is
based upon the similarity of content between the atu of the Tarot and the kua
of the I Ching. The Hebrew letter PE, on the Tarot atu "The Tower",
is assigned to the I Ching kua 20, 23, 24, 3, 42, and 27 because the symbol,
image, and concept content of the atu and kua are similar to a high degree. As
a result, PE is analogous to the amino acid leucine because the kua assigned to
it are analogous to the codons which code for leucine.
I used the
Wilhelm/Baynes(3) translation of the I Ching and Aleister Crowley's "Book
of Thoth,"(4) his interpretation of the Tarot. I didn't think that I would
find too great a similarity between these two divination systems since Wilhem's
I Ching is derived from the very moralistic Confucian school of Oriental
philosophy while Crowley's Tarot is a vehicle for his highly idiosyncratic and
minimally moralistic system of "sex magic" as a path to
enlightenment.
Imagine my
shock and surprise when I discovered that these two diverse approaches to
divination, one Eastern and one Western, demonstrated an enormous similarity of
content; symbolic, imagistic, and conceptual - WHEN GROUPED AND ARRANGED AS THE
NUCLEIC ACIDS AND AMINO ACIDS ARE GROUPED AND ARRANGED IN THE GENETIC
CODE.
I couldn't
shake the idea that these two symbol systems may be vehicles for the transport
of two halves of what may be a textual virus - set to infect the body politic
of Earth at a time when that knowledge is needed. Perhaps somewhere in the vast
genetic library that is the human genome there is a clear message, in the
Hebrew or a precursor language, from "The Creator(s)."
If "The
Creator(s)" have a sense of humor similar to ours, maybe they would get a
kick out of the idea of letting us know, at a future time when we are
technologically advanced enough, just who we are and how we came to be.
[...]
INTERPRETING "SEFER YETZIRAH" THROUGH
GENETIC ENGINEERING
In the Sefer
Yetzirah, we have a magical text which purports to allow those who understand
and use it to create living creatures. This is accomplished using 22 letters
which are manipulated like bits of clay into chains that are arranged into
complementary parallels and other shapes. This is very similar to scientific
descriptions of the activity which takes place within the cells of living
things. Scientists use the language metaphor to describe these chemicals and
their activities. Lengths of DNA and the genes which reside there are refered
to as genetic sentences and their chemical components are refered to as words
and letters. Counting the stop codons as 2 seperate groups there are 22 amino
acid letters in the chemical alphabet of life.
"2.
Twenty-Two letters are the foundation: He engraved them, He hewed them out, He
combined them, He weighed them, and He set them at opposites, and He formed
through them everything that is formed and everything that is destined to be
formed."
In addition
to the numerical and functional analogies between the amino acids and the Hebrew
alphabet there is a category coincidence as well. The letters of the Hebrew
language in the Sefer Yetzirah are arranged into 3 categories.
3
"Mother" letters: Aleph, Mem, Shin
7 "Double" letters: Beth, Gimel, Daleth, Kaph, Pe, Resh, Tau
12 "Simple" letters: He, Vau, Zain, Cheth, Teth, Yod, Lamed, Nun, Samekh, Ayin, Tzaddi, Qoph
7 "Double" letters: Beth, Gimel, Daleth, Kaph, Pe, Resh, Tau
12 "Simple" letters: He, Vau, Zain, Cheth, Teth, Yod, Lamed, Nun, Samekh, Ayin, Tzaddi, Qoph
[...]
When
scientists speak of the chemistry of life they often use the metaphor of
language, as pointed out earlier. They also use other metaphors. The strands of
DNA or mRNA are also spoken of as "threads" and the entire genome is
often refered to as "the thread of life." I mention this because one
of the many translations of Sefer Yetzirah which I have read uses the
"thread of life" metaphor extensively.
"The
twenty-two letters which form the stamina after having been appointed and
established by God, He combined, weighed and changed them, and formed by them
all beings which are in existence, and all those which will be formed in all
time to come." (p. 20) (The Ancient and Mystical Order Rosae Crucis -
AMORC, translated by Rev. Dr. Isidor Kalisch, 1877)
The word
that Kalisch translates as "stamina" is the Hebrew word yesod which
others translate (more correctly) as "foundation." Why Kalisch chose
"stamina" is unknown, but its use in this context is provocative
since it is derived from the Latin:
STAMINA -
the plural of stamen = warp: the thread of life spun by the fates. endurance.
Greek stemon = thread. Note that: Stamen - the organ of the flower that
produces the male gamete. This shows that "the thread of life"
concept was linked early on to the process of reproduction.
So, if we
substitute the origin of "stamina" for "stamina" in the
text, we get: "The twenty-two letters which form the thread of life after
having been appointed and established by God, He combined, weighed and changed
them, and formed by them all beings which are in existence, and all those which
will be formed in all time to come."
"This
Torah, the linguistic movement of Ein-Sof within itself, is called a malbush
("garment"), though in fact it is inseparable from the divine
substance and is woven within it ... (the garments) length is made up of the
alphabets of the Sefer Yetzirah and had 231 "gates" ... which form
the archistructure of divine thought. Its breadth was composed of an
elaboration of the Tetragrammaton according to the numerical value of the four
possible spellings of the fully written names of its letters, ... , which were
the "threads" and the "weave" that were originally situated
in the hem of the garment. ... The size of this garment was twice the area
necessary for the creation of all the worlds. After it had been woven, it was
folded in two: half of it ascended and its letters stood behind the letters of
the other half." (Kabbalah p.132)
We can see
then that the tradition of the Hebrews uses the metaphors of clay and threads
to explain the creation of all living things, including man. We pass now to the
Chinese whose I Ching forms the other half of the occult genetic code. They too
have creation myths and traditions that use similar metaphors. The following
exerpts are from: "Mythologies of the Ancient World", Samuel Noah
Kramer Ed.
Fu Hsi is
the legendary creator of the I Ching. His sister/consort is Nu Kua. She is also
portrayed as the creator of mankind:
"It is
popularly said that when Heaven and Earth had opened forth, but before there
were human beings, Nu-Kua created men by patting yellow earth together. But the
work tasked her strength and left her no free time, so that she then dragged a
string through mud, thus heaping it up so as to make it into men. Therefore the
rich and the noble are those men of yellow earth whereas the poor and the lowly
- all ordinary people - are those cord-made men." (p. 338)
To wrap-up
the analysis I will demonstrate some of the curious evidence derived from the
Qabalistic practice of gematria, the practice of assigning number values to
Hebrew words based on the numerical values of the Hebrew letters. Note that
there are 46 chromosomes in the normal human. Each of the parents contribute,
via their sperm and ovum, 23 chromosomes to the new being they create together.
Article
Source: http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/ciencia/occultgeneticcode/
Extraterrestrial Genes in Human DNA?
Collaborative research from a
gathering of exo-scientists postulate that there are genes from over 20
extraterrestrials civilizations in Human DNA. These exo-scientists have
continued the work of Nobel Prize winner Dr. Frances Crick, and other
scholars in this area. Current findings are consistent with reports of
Professor Sam Chang, who discreetly released information on his own
apparent findings, in association with the Human Genome Project.
Scientists are beginning to complain
more and more about political attempts to compromise the integrity of their
important work for humanity. The discreet releasing of findings, is one
apparent way in which scientists try to cope with scientific peer pressures to
conform to prevailing political pressures.
Details of findings have been published in part, by Dr. Michael Salla, who is a learned scholar on extraterrestrial research. Exo-scientists and other researchers base their findings, in part, on carefully collecting data, which includes well corroborated documented observations by contactees and "whistleblowers", as well as other documentation.
Details of findings have been published in part, by Dr. Michael Salla, who is a learned scholar on extraterrestrial research. Exo-scientists and other researchers base their findings, in part, on carefully collecting data, which includes well corroborated documented observations by contactees and "whistleblowers", as well as other documentation.
These verified reliable sources have
come into contact with representatives of non-Earth Human civilizations
living in human populations at-large, and also in official capacities.
Source:
Scientists Confirm Extraterrestrial Genes in Human DNA
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/ciencia/ciencia_adn08.htm
Scientists Confirm Extraterrestrial Genes in Human DNA
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/ciencia/ciencia_adn08.htm
* * *
Could we
have DNA codes in us now that bear the hallmark of that interception? He then
names specific DNA codes, they call them trinucleotide repeats and alas, they
seem to resemble something that a cloning mechanism would produce. The biggest
irony, he says, is that the Greys don't realise that they can't, with physical
means, get a handle on something that's not physical, simply because they only
understand the physical. So the tragedy lies in the damage they do in
trying to reach what they can't reach. Converting us, via abduction and genetic manipulation, to be more like them, in the vain hope that they can bridge into our souls that way. Making us, in other words, more like machines.
trying to reach what they can't reach. Converting us, via abduction and genetic manipulation, to be more like them, in the vain hope that they can bridge into our souls that way. Making us, in other words, more like machines.
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