06-14-2014, 06:44 PM
Leebo Wrote:.
Imagine life begins,
Leebo,
I'm having trouble imagining. How did life begin? Please don't use the Miller–Urey experiment as an example because they were evolutionary scientists so they're obviously out to prove that life can just spontaneously jump into being on its own. It's the classic "fox watching the hen house" dilemma. On top of that Miller only got 11 amino acids of the naturally occurring 20 needed to form proteins necessary for an organism to exist. Even if we are going with a modest or "short" protein we would still need 150 amino acids in exactly the right order. doing some quick math for a single protein with 150 amino acids in the chain with 20 possible at each site you would have 20^150 power. converted to a base of 10 that's 10^195 possible combinations all just to get one protein.
All this to say the theory of evolution seems to have a serious problem concerning the origin of life and if something has a problem at square one, then we have problems with the whole theory. If your arrow is crooked just a little bit, it's not going to fly straight. Maybe I'm just not getting something.
Skeptically,
Jack