Questions to Evolution: Doesn't the amount of Helium in the atmosphere require that the Earth has to be somewhere around 10,000 years old? Doesn't the fact that the sun has no core require that the Earth must be no more than 40,000 years old? How did cells *decide* to reproduce themselves? How did chemicals group together and all of a sudden become a cell? What made cells decide to use the extremely complicated DNA molecule to use as a blueprint for making themselves? Isn't a directivity required in light of the following proposed facts?: a) Cells somehow decided to create DNA. b) Cells somehow decided to use DNA as the blueprint for making copies of themselves. c) Life disobeyed entropy and somehow developed from simple to complex. d) Chemicals decided to somehow come together and create life from lifelessness. e) Cells somehow decided to group themselves together for the common good. f) Cells somehow decided to group together to become organs that are extremely useful for the bodies which animals and humans possess. g) Cells nearly almost always reproduce "exact" copies of themselves. h) Cells decided to specialize and become useful for different functions within the body they were creating.