The tipping point (revisited): 95K (1)

By: James V. Kohl | Published on: December 9, 2019

Today is my 10th year Twitter Anniversary. Since I started my account, the number of indexed published works that link light-activated microRNA biogenesis to the genesis of biodiversity via the physiology of reproduction rose by 88723 to 94939.
The average of nearly 9000 more publications each year for 10 years of scientific progress clearly links God’s Creation of sunlight and water from the oxidative phosphorylation of amino acid substitutions to biophysically constrained viral latency in species from microbes to humans during the past 6-10,000 years.
See:  Past 5,000 years prolific for changes to human genome 11/28/12

The findings confirm their earlier work suggesting that the majority of variants, including potentially harmful ones, were picked up during the past 5,000–10,000 years.

But this was reported yesterday.
‘Milk Yeast’ Originated from Chance Encounter between Fruit Fly and Milk 5,500 Years Ago 12/8/19

…Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was a microbe selected from nature to make beer, wine and other fermented drinks 13,000 years ago.

“Selected from nature” is the key phrase that offends all serious scientists. Ecological adaptations are energy-dependent. The energy-dependent physiology of reproduction in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (“Baker’s yeast”) is biophysically constrained by the pheromone-controlled physiology of reproduction and alternative splicings of pre-mRNAs, which are now called microRNAs in most of the 94939 published works.
See for comparison our section on molecular epigenetics in From Fertilization to Adult Sexual Behavior (1996)
We linked the energy-dependent Creation of pre-mRNAs/microRNAs to the transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of all biophysically constrained life on Earth.
10th year Twitter Anniversary suggestion:  Stop hating those who have refuted your ridiculous theories. There are too many serious scientists who are ridiculing you and everyone like you.
See:


Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Want more on the same topic?

Swipe/Drag Left and Right To Browse Related Posts: