2. DNA does not exist. Years later
By Robbin Koefoed Jakobsen
Gregor Johann Mendel (1822-1884) was a member of the monastery St. Thomas Abbey in Brno which today is a city of Czech Republic. It is a good idea to remember this person (Gregor Johann Mendel) because he is a key individual forward in this series of articles.
Now, in the garden of this monastery Mendel conducted experiments with pea plants. These experiments were presented in his writing "Versuche über Pflanzenhybriden" ('Experiments on Plant Hybridization'). It was this work that made Mendel known as "father of modern genetics"
Gregor Johann Mendel "… was among the first biologists to make systematic use of mathematical methods.". Quote from Jan Kalina, Head of Department of Medical Informatics and Biostatistics at Institute of Computer Science of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
In his "Experiments on Plant Hybridization" Gregor Johann Mendel uses mathematical calculations to conclude what is going on inside these pea plants WITHOUT having seen these mathcalculations unfold inside the plants.
Now for the critical thinker one most determine how Gregor Johann Mendel could conclude that what was going on inside some plants was based on the rules of mathematics.
Lets continue.
Take a careful look at the quotation down below. It derives from the DNA Learning Center at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. It states in a few words that these math calculations of Gregor Johann Mendel was applied to the existence of all living things.
"Although Mendel's laws were first tested in pea plants and fruit flies, evidence quickly mounted that they applied to all living things."
Illuminati and Gregor Johann Mendel
"… at the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth centuries, European Illuminati and Freemasons brought to life an intellectual and economic centre in Brno that drew the attention of the whole of Europe." - PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno)
Maria Walburga von Truchsess-Zeil (1762-1828) was in the social environment of the secret society of Illuminati in Brno. This is according to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno)
Individuals involved in this contact was illuminati member from 1783 Ignaz Mehoffer and freemason Bernard Seybold.
Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber (1769-1850) was "… confidants of the Countess." (the 'countess' is Maria Walburga von Truchsess-Zeil) - quotation stems from PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno)
Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber "… travelled through Germany as her personal chaplain …" ('her' is Maria Walburga von Truchsess-Zeil) - quotation derives from PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno)
Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber also had a close friendship with Maria Walburga von Truchsess-Zeil. This is again according to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno)
Again according to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno) “Like the Countess, he [Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber] was in personal contact with [illuminati member from 1783] Viktor Riecke.”
Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber was according to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno) “… an admirer of [illuminati member from 1783] Riecke and [illuminati member] André …”
Now
"It was Schreiber who recognized Johann Mendel's talent" - PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno)
Here is the story:
Gregor Johann Mendel was recognized because of his 'talents' by Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber in the village school Mendel was attending at a young age. It was Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber who persuaded Mendel's parents "… to continue his education in spite of their limited resources" - Professor Peter Dunn, University of Bristol.
According to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno) Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber had a stronger intellectual authority than Mendels teacher in the village school and "... had a greater influence on the boy.".
According to Professor Peter Dunn, University of Bristol, Johann Andreas Edmond Schreiber was "... an expert in fruit growing ..." and according to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno) Schreiber "… experimented with fruit trees in his garden". Schreiber furthermore experimented with bees together with Gregor Johann Mendel's father Anton Mendel.
It is worth noting that these pea plants Gregor Johann Mendel used in his experiments, as mentioned further above, are botanicaly considered fruits.
Also according to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson
Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno) it was Schreibers experiments that motivated Mendel to study at a boarding school (in Leipnik), later at a gymnasium (in Troppau) and at a University (in Olmütz).
At the University in Olmütz Mendel achieved the highest grades in mathematics.
When he was 21 years old Mendel entered the monastery (St. Thomas Abbey). This was the place he was going to create his mathematical pea plant experiments.
Cyrill Franz Napp (1792-1867), a monk, at the very place of the monastery (St. Thomas Abbey) were Gregor Johann Mendel entered at the age of 21 was in the circle of Maria Walburga von Truchsess-Zeil. This is according to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno). Cyrill Franz Napp invited Mendel to the monastery. This monk Cyrill Franz Napp was a recognised specialist in breeding fruit trees.
According to PhDr. Petr Peňáz, Assistant professor and PhDr. Thomas Donaldson Sparling, B.A. at Masaryk University Faculty of Science (Brno) Cyrill Franz Napp “… made the Augustinian monastery the intellectual heir of [illuminati member from 1783] Riecke and [illuminati member] André's efforts …”
According to Jan Kalina, Head of Department of Medical Informatics and Biostatistics at Institute of Computer Science of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Cyrill Franz Napp "… came to Mendel's rescue not for the first time, authorizing an extended programme of experimental hybridization at the monastery …". Mendel became head of the monastery after the death of Cyrill Franz Napp in 1867.
"… Gregor Mendel is not the ‘unknown genius’ described in the historical textbooks, who would have discovered the laws of heredity alone and without any help, guided only by his passion for peas … As a matter of fact, most of the notions and knowledge on which Mendel’s work relies can be found in the scientific literature of his time. It is known that he had access to it through the books available in the excellent library of the monastery ... He was in no way isolated from the scientific and industrial community of his time, as testified by his numerous trips to congress and exhibits in Austria, England, France, Germany and Italy, as he had affiliations to learned societies." quote by Charles Auffray, European Institute for Systems Biology and Medicine, Vourles, France and Denis Noble, Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Gregor Johann Mendel died in the year 1884.
In Gregor Johann Mendel's "Versuche über Pflanzenhybriden" he writes the following "This experiment was practically confined to a small plant group, and is now, after eight years’ pursuit, concluded in all essentials. Whether the plan upon which the separate experiments were conducted and carried out was the best suited to attain the desired end is left to the friendly decision of the reader."
Now ask yourself why Gregor Johann Mendel would undertake such an unusual experimentation with fruits that took so many years. Did he invent this plan on his own?