| MOLECULAR
BIOLOGY AND
THE ORIGIN OF LIFE
In previous sections of this book, we have shown how
the fossil record invalidates the theory of evolution. In point
of fact, there was no need for us to relate any of that, because
the theory of evolution collapses long before one gets to any claims
about the evidence of fossils. The subject that renders the theory
meaningless from the very outset is the question of how life first
appeared on earth.
When it addresses this question, evolutionary theory
claims that life started with a cell that formed by chance. According
to this scenario, four billion years ago various chemical compounds
underwent a reaction in the primordial atmosphere on the earth in
which the effects of thunderbolts and atmospheric pressure led to
the formation of the first living cell.
The first thing that must be said is that the claim
that nonliving materials can come together to form life is an unscientific
one that has not been verified by any experiment or observation.
Life is only generated from life. Each living cell is formed by
the replication of another cell. No one in the world has ever succeeded
in forming a living cell by bringing inanimate materials together,
not even in the most advanced laboratories.
The theory of evolution claims that a living cell-which
cannot be produced even when all the power of the human intellect,
knowledge and technology are brought to bear-nevertheless managed
to form by chance under primordial conditions on the earth. In the
following pages, we will examine why this claim is contrary to the
most basic principles of science and reason.
An Example of the Logic of "Chance"
If one believes that a living cell can come into existence
by chance, then there is nothing to prevent one from believing a
similar story that we will relate below. It is the story of a town.
One day, a lump of clay, pressed between the rocks
in a barren land, becomes wet after it rains. The wet clay dries
and hardens when the sun rises, and takes on a stiff, resistant
form. Afterwards, these rocks, which also served as a mould, are
somehow smashed into pieces, and then a neat, well shaped, and strong
brick appears. This brick waits under the same natural conditions
for years for a similar brick to be formed. This goes on until hundreds
and thousands of the same bricks have been formed in the same place.
However, by chance, none of the bricks that were previously formed
are damaged. Although exposed to storms, rain, wind, scorching sun,
and freezing cold for thousands of years, the bricks do not crack,
break up, or get dragged away, but wait there in the same place
with the same determination for other bricks to form.
When the number of bricks is adequate, they erect a
building by being arranged sideways and on top of each other, having
been randomly dragged along by the effects of natural conditions
such as winds, storms, or tornadoes. Meanwhile, materials such as
cement or soil mixtures form under "natural conditions," with perfect
timing, and creep between the bricks to clamp them to each other.
While all this is happening, iron ore under the ground is shaped
under "natural conditions" and lays the foundations of a building
that is to be formed with these bricks. At the end of this process,
a complete building rises with all its materials, carpentry, and
installations intact.
Of course, a building does not only consist of foundations,
bricks, and cement. How, then, are the other missing materials to
be obtained? The answer is simple: all kinds of materials that are
needed for the construction of the building exist in the earth on
which it is erected. Silicon for the glass, copper for the electric
cables, iron for the columns, beams, water pipes, etc. all exist
under the ground in abundant quantities. It takes only the skill
of "natural conditions" to shape and place these materials inside
the building. All the installations, carpentry, and accessories
are placed among the bricks with the help of the blowing wind, rain,
and earthquakes. Everything has gone so well that the bricks are
arranged so as to leave the necessary window spaces as if they knew
that something called glass would be formed later on by natural
conditions. Moreover, they have not forgotten to leave some space
to allow the installation of water, electricity and heating systems,
which are also later to be formed by chance. Everything has gone
so well that "coincidences" and "natural conditions" produce a perfect
design.
If you have managed to sustain your belief in this
story so far, then you should have no trouble surmising how the
town's other buildings, plants, highways, sidewalks, substructures,
communications, and transportation systems came about. If you possess
technical knowledge and are fairly conversant with the subject,
you can even write an extremely "scientific" book of a few volumes
stating your theories about "the evolutionary process of a sewage
system and its uniformity with the present structures." You may
well be honored with academic awards for your clever studies, and
may consider yourself a genius, shedding light on the nature of
humanity.
The theory of evolution, which claims that life came
into existence by chance, is no less absurd than our story, for,
with all its operational systems, and systems of communication,
transportation and management, a cell is no less complex than a
city. In his book Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, the molecular biologist
Michael Denton discusses the complex structure of the cell:
To grasp the reality of life as
it has been revealed by molecular biology, we must magnify a cell
a thousand million times until it is twenty kilometers in diameter
and resembles a giant airship large enough to cover a great city
like London or New York. What we would then see would be an object
of unparalleled complexity and adaptive design. On the surface of
the cell we would see millions of openings, like the port holes
of a vast space ship, opening and closing to allow a continual stream
of materials to flow in and out. If we were to enter one of these
openings we would find ourselves in a world of supreme technology
and bewildering complexity... Is it really credible that random
processes could have constructed a reality, the smallest element
of which-a functional protein or gene-is complex beyond our own
creative capacities, a reality which is the very antithesis of chance,
which excels in every sense anything produced by the intelligence
of man?237
 |
In Darwin's time, it was thought
that the cell had a very simple structure. Darwin's
ardent supporter Ernst Haeckel suggested that the
above mud pulled up from the bottom of the sea could
produce life by itself. |
 |
|
The Complex Structure and Systems in the Cell
The complex structure of the
living cell was unknown in Darwin's day and at the time, ascribing
life to "coincidences and natural conditions" was thought by evolutionists
to be convincing enough. Darwin had proposed that the first cell
could easily have formed "in some warm little pond."238
One of Darwin's supporters, the German biologist Ernst Haeckel,
examined under the microscope a mixture of mud removed from the
sea bed by a research ship and claimed that this was a nonliving
substance that turned into a living one. This so-called "mud that
comes to life," known as Bathybius haeckelii ("Haeckel's mud from
the depths"), is an indication of just how simple a thing life was
thought to be by the founders of the theory of evolution.
The
technology of the twentieth century has delved into the tiniest
particles of life, and has revealed that the cell is the most complex
system mankind has ever confronted. Today we know that the cell
contains power stations producing the energy to be used by the cell,
factories manufacturing the enzymes and hormones essential for life,
a databank where all the necessary information about all products
to be produced is recorded, complex transportation systems and pipelines
for carrying raw materials and products from one place to another,
advanced laboratories and refineries for breaking down external
raw materials into their useable parts, and specialized cell membrane
proteins to control the incoming and outgoing materials. And these
constitute only a small part of this incredibly complex system.
W. H. Thorpe, an evolutionist
scientist, acknowledges that "The most elementary type of cell constitutes
a 'mechanism' unimaginably more complex than any machine yet thought
up, let alone constructed, by man."239
A cell is so complex that even the high level of technology
attained today cannot produce one. No effort to create an artificial
cell has ever met with success. Indeed, all attempts to do so have
been abandoned.
The theory of evolution claims that this system-which
mankind, with all the intelligence, knowledge and technology at
its disposal, cannot succeed in reproducing-came into existence
"by chance" under the conditions of the primordial earth. Actually,
the probability of forming a cell by chance is about the same as
that of producing a perfect copy of a book following an explosion
in a printing house.

Sir Fred Hoyle |
The English mathematician
and astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle made a similar comparison in an interview
published in Nature magazine on November 12, 1981. Although an evolutionist
himself, Hoyle stated that the chance that higher life forms might
have emerged in this way is comparable to the chance that a tornado
sweeping through a junk-yard might assemble a Boeing 747 from the
materials therein.240 This means that it is not
possible for the cell to have come into being by chance, and therefore
it must definitely have been "created."
One of the basic reasons why the theory of evolution
cannot explain how the cell came into existence is the "irreducible
complexity" in it. A living cell maintains itself with the harmonious
co-operation of many organelles. If only one of these organelles
fails to function, the cell cannot remain alive. The cell does not
have the chance to wait for unconscious mechanisms like natural
selection or mutation to permit it to develop. Thus, the first cell
on earth was necessarily a complete cell possessing all the required
organelles and functions, and this definitely means that this cell
had to have been created.
The Problem of the Origin of Proteins
So much for the cell, but evolution fails even to account
for the building-blocks of a cell. The formation, under natural
conditions, of just one single protein out of the thousands of complex
protein molecules making up the cell is impossible.
Proteins are giant molecules consisting of smaller
units called amino acids that are arranged in a particular sequence
in certain quantities and structures. These units constitute the
building blocks of a living protein. The simplest protein is composed
of 50 amino acids, but there are some that contain thousands.
The crucial point is this. The absence, addition, or
replacement of a single amino acid in the structure of a protein
causes the protein to become a useless molecular heap. Every amino
acid has to be in the right place and in the right order. The theory
of evolution, which claims that life emerged as a result of chance,
is quite helpless in the face of this order, since it is too wondrous
to be explained by coincidence. (Furthermore, the theory cannot
even substantiate the claim of the accidental formation of amino
acids, as will be discussed later.)
The fact that it is quite impossible for the functional
structure of proteins to come about by chance can easily be observed
even by simple probability calculations that anybody can understand.
For instance, an average-sized protein molecule composed
of 288 amino acids, and contains twelve different types of amino
acids can be arranged in 10300 different ways. (This is an astronomically
huge number, consisting of 1 followed by 300 zeros.) Of all of these
possible sequences, only one forms the desired protein molecule.
The rest of them are amino-acid chains that are either totally useless,
or else potentially harmful to living things.
In other words, the probability of the formation
of only one protein molecule is "1 in 10300." The probability
of this "1" actually occurring is practically nil. (In practice,
probabilities smaller than 1 over 1050 are thought of
as "zero probability").
The complex 3-D structure of the protein
cytochrome-C. The slightest difference in the order of the
amino acids, represented by little balls, will render the
protein nonfunctional. |
Furthermore, a protein molecule of 288 amino acids
is a rather modest one compared with some giant protein molecules
consisting of thousands of amino acids. When we apply similar probability
calculations to these giant protein molecules, we see that even
the word "impossible" is insufficient to describe the true situation.
When we proceed one step further in the evolutionary
scheme of life, we observe that one single protein means nothing
by itself. One of the smallest bacteria ever discovered, Mycoplasma
hominis H39, contains 600 types of proteins. In this case, we would
have to repeat the probability calculations we have made above for
one protein for each of these 600 different types of proteins. The
result beggars even the concept of impossibility.
Some people reading these lines who have so far accepted
the theory of evolution as a scientific explanation may suspect
that these numbers are exaggerated and do not reflect the true facts.
That is not the case: these are definite and concrete facts. No
evolutionist can object to these numbers.
This situation is in fact acknowledged
by many evolutionists. For example, Harold F. Blum, a prominent
evolutionist scientist, states that "The spontaneous formation of
a polypeptide of the size of the smallest known proteins seems beyond
all probability."241
Evolutionists claim that molecular
evolution took place over a very long period of time and that this
made the impossible possible. Nevertheless, no matter how long the
given period may be, it is not possible for amino acids to form
proteins by chance. William Stokes, an American geologist, admits
this fact in his book Essentials of Earth History, writing that
the probability is so small "that it would not occur during billions
of years on billions of planets, each covered by a blanket of concentrated
watery solution of the necessary amino acids."242
So what does all this mean? Perry Reeves, a professor
of chemistry, answers the question:
When one examines the vast number
of possible structures that could result from a simple random combination
of amino acids in an evaporating primordial pond, it is mind-boggling
to believe that life could have originated in this way. It is more
plausible that a Great Builder with a master plan would be required
for such a task.243
If the coincidental formation of even one of these
proteins is impossible, it is billions of times "more impossible"
for some one million of those proteins to come together by chance
and make up a complete human cell. What is more, by no means does
a cell consist of a mere heap of proteins. In addition to the proteins,
a cell also includes nucleic acids, carbohydrates, lipids, vitamins,
and many other chemicals such as electrolytes arranged in a specific
proportion, equilibrium, and design in terms of both structure and
function. Each of these elements functions as a building block or
co-molecule in various organelles.
Robert Shapiro, a professor of chemistry
at New York University and a DNA expert, calculated the probability
of the coincidental formation of the 2000 types of proteins found
in a single bacterium (There are 200,000 different types of proteins
in a human cell.) The number that was found was 1 over 1040000.244
(This is an incredible number obtained by putting 40,000 zeros after
the 1)
A professor of applied mathematics and astronomy from
University College Cardiff, Wales, Chandra Wickramasinghe, comments:
The likelihood of the spontaneous
formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with
40,000 noughts after it... It is big enough to bury Darwin and the
whole theory of evolution. There was no primeval soup, neither on
this planet nor on any other, and if the beginnings of life were
not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful
intelligence.245
Sir Fred Hoyle comments on these
implausible numbers:
Indeed, such a theory (that life was assembled by an
intelligence) is so obvious that one wonders why it is not widely
accepted as being self-evident. The reasons are psychological rather
than scientific.246
An article published in the January 1999 issue of Science
News revealed that no explanation had yet been found for how amino
acids could turn into proteins:
….no one has ever satisfactorily
explained how the widely distributed ingredients linked up into
proteins. Presumed conditions of primordial Earth would have driven
the amino acids toward lonely isolation.247
Left-handed Proteins
Let us now examine in detail why the evolutionist scenario
regarding the formation of proteins is impossible.
Even the correct sequence of the right amino acids
is still not enough for the formation of a functional protein molecule.
In addition to these requirements, each of the 20 different types
of amino acids present in the composition of proteins must be left-handed.
There are two different types of amino acids-as of all organic molecules-called
"left-handed" and "right-handed." The difference between them is
the mirror-symmetry between their three dimensional structures,
which is similar to that of a person's right and left hands.
The same protein's left- (L) and right- (D) handed isomers.
The proteins in living creatures consist only of left-handed
amino acids.
|
Amino acids of either of these two types can easily
bond with one another. But one astonishing fact that has been revealed
by research is that all the proteins in plants and animals on this
planet, from the simplest organism to the most complex, are made
up of left-handed amino acids. If even a single right-handed amino
acid gets attached to the structure of a protein, the protein is
rendered useless. In a series of experiments, surprisingly, bacteria
that were exposed to right-handed amino acids immediately destroyed
them. In some cases, they produced usable left-handed amino acids
from the fractured components.
Let us for an instant suppose that life came about
by chance as evolutionists claim it did. In this case, the right-
and left-handed amino acids that were generated by chance should
be present in roughly equal proportions in nature. Therefore, all
living things should have both right- and left-handed amino acids
in their constitution, because chemically it is possible for amino
acids of both types to combine with each other. However, as we know,
in the real world the proteins existing in all living organisms
are made up only of left-handed amino acids.
The question of how proteins can pick out only the
left-handed ones from among all amino acids, and how not even a
single right-handed amino acid gets involved in the life process,
is a problem that still baffles evolutionists. Such a specific and
conscious selection constitutes one of the greatest impasses facing
the theory of evolution.
Moreover, this characteristic of proteins makes the
problem facing evolutionists with respect to "chance" even worse.
In order for a "meaningful" protein to be generated, it is not enough
for the amino acids to be present in a particular number and sequence,
and to be combined together in the right three-dimensional design.
Additionally, all these amino acids have to be left-handed: not
even one of them can be right-handed. Yet there is no natural selection
mechanism which can identify that a right-handed amino acid has
been added to the sequence and recognize that it must therefore
be removed from the chain. This situation once more eliminates for
good the possibility of coincidence and chance.
The Britannica Science Encyclopaedia,
which is an outspoken defender of evolution, states that the amino
acids of all living organisms on earth, and the building blocks
of complex polymers such as proteins, have the same left-handed
asymmetry. It adds that this is tantamount to tossing a coin a million
times and always getting heads. The same encyclopaedia states that
it is impossible to understand why molecules become left-handed
or right-handed, and that this choice is fascinatingly related to
the origin of life on earth.248
If a coin always turns up heads when tossed a million
times, is it more logical to attribute that to chance, or else to
accept that there is conscious intervention going on? The answer
should be obvious. However, obvious though it may be, evolutionists
still take refuge in coincidence, simply because they do not want
to accept the existence of conscious intervention.
A situation similar to the left-handedness of amino
acids also exists with respect to nucleotides, the smallest units
of the nucleic acids, DNA and RNA. In contrast to proteins, in which
only left-handed amino acids are chosen, in the case of the nucleic
acids, the preferred forms of their nucleotide components are always
right-handed. This is another fact that can never be explained by
chance.
In conclusion, it is proven beyond a shadow of a doubt
by the probabilities we have examined that the origin of life cannot
be explained by chance. If we attempt to calculate the probability
of an average-sized protein consisting of 400 amino acids being
selected only from left-handed amino acids, we come up with a probability
of 1 in 2400, or 10120. Just for a comparison,
let us remember that the number of electrons in the universe is
estimated at 1079, which although vast, is a much smaller number.
The probability of these amino acids forming the required sequence
and functional form would generate much larger numbers. If we add
these probabilities to each other, and if we go on to work out the
probabilities of even higher numbers and types of proteins, the
calculations become inconceivable.
The Indispensability of the Peptide Link
The difficulties the theory of evolution is unable
to overcome with regard to the development of a single protein are
not limited to those we have recounted so far. It is not enough
for amino acids to be arranged in the correct numbers, sequences,
and required three-dimensional structures. The formation of a protein
also requires that amino acid molecules with more than one arm be
linked to each other only in certain ways. Such a bond is called
a "peptide bond." Amino acids can make different bonds with each
other; but proteins are made up of those-and only those-amino acids
which are joined by peptide bonds.
A comparison will clarify this point. Suppose that
all the parts of a car were complete and correctly assembled, with
the sole exception that one of the wheels was fastened in place
not with the usual nuts and bolts, but with a piece of wire, in
such a way that its hub faced the ground. It would be impossible
for such a car to move even the shortest distance, no matter how
complex its technology or how powerful its engine. At first glance,
everything would seem to be in the right place, but the faulty attachment
of even one wheel would make the entire car useless. In the same
way, in a protein molecule the joining of even one amino acid to
another with a bond other than a peptide bond would make the entire
molecule useless.
Research has shown that amino acids combining at random
combine with a peptide bond only 50 percent of the time, and that
the rest of the time different bonds that are not present in proteins
emerge. To function properly, each amino acid making up a protein
must be joined to others only with a peptide bond, in the same way
that it likewise must be chosen only from among left-handed forms.
The probability of this happening is the same as the
probability of each protein's being left-handed. That is, when we
consider a protein made up of 400 amino acids, the probability of
all amino acids combining among themselves with only peptide bonds
is 1 in 2399.
Zero Probability
If we add together the three probabilities (that of
amino acids being laid out correctly, that of their all being left-handed,
and that of their all being joined by peptide links), then we come
face to face with the astronomical figure of 1 in 10950.
This is a probability only on paper. Practically speaking, there
is zero chance of its actually happening. As we saw earlier, in
mathematics, a probability smaller than 1 in 1050 is
statistically considered to have a "zero" probability of occurring.
Even if we suppose that amino acids have combined and
decomposed by a "trial and error" method, without losing any time
since the formation of the earth, in order to form a single protein
molecule, the time that would be required for something with a probability
of 10950 to happen would still hugely exceed the estimated
age of the earth.

val: valine
cyc: cycteine
ala: alanine |
PROTEIN SYNTHESIS:The ribosome reads the
messenger RNA, and arranges the amino acids according to
the information it receives there. In the illustrations,
the consecutive order of the [ val, cys, and ala amino acids
], established by the ribosome and transfer RNA, can be
seen. All proteins in nature are produced by this complex
process. No protein comes about by "accident." |
The conclusion to be drawn from all this is that evolution
falls into a terrible abyss of improbability even when it comes
to the formation of a single protein.
One of the foremost proponents of the theory of evolution,
Professor Richard Dawkins, states the impossibility the theory has
fallen into in these terms:
So the sort of lucky event we are
looking at could be so wildly improbable that the chances of its
happening, somewhere in the universe, could be as low as one in
a billion billion billion in any one year. If it did happen on only
one planet, anywhere in the universe, that planet has to be our
planet-because here we are talking about it.249
This admission by one of evolution's foremost authorities clearly
reflects the logical muddle the theory of evolution is built on.
The above statements in Dawkins's book Climbing Mount Improbable
are a striking example of circular reasoning which actually explains
nothing: "If we are here, then that means that evolution happened."
As we have seen, even the most prominent of the proponents of evolution
confess that the theory is buried in impossibility when it comes
to accounting for the first stage of life. But how interesting it
is that, rather than accept the complete unreality of the theory
they maintain, they prefer to cling to evolution in a dogmatic manner!
This is a completely ideological fixation.
Is There a Trial-and-Error Mechanism in Nature?
Finally, we may conclude with a very important point
in relation to the basic logic of probability calculations, of which
we have already seen some examples. We indicated that the probability
calculations made above reach astronomical levels, and that these
astronomical odds have no chance of actually happening. However,
there is a much more important and damaging fact facing evolutionists
here. This is that under natural conditions, no period of trial
and error can even start, despite the astronomical odds, because
there is no trial-and-error mechanism in nature from which proteins
could emerge.
The calculations we gave above to demonstrate the probability
of the formation of a protein molecule with 500 amino acids are
valid only for an ideal trial-and-error environment, which does
not actually exist in real life. That is, the probability of obtaining
a useful protein is "1" in 10950 only if we suppose that
there exists an imaginary mechanism in which an invisible hand joins
500 amino acids at random and then, seeing that this is not the
right combination, disentangles them one by one, and arranges them
again in a different order, and so on. In each trial, the amino
acids would have to be separated one by one, and arranged in a new
order. The synthesis should be stopped after the 500th amino acid
has been added, and it must be ensured that not even one extra amino
acid is involved. The trial should then be stopped to see whether
or not a functional protein has yet been formed, and, in the event
of failure, everything should be split up again and then tested
for another sequence. Additionally, in each trial, not even one
extraneous substance should be allowed to become involved. It is
also imperative that the chain formed during the trial should not
be separated and destroyed before reaching the 499th link. These
conditions mean that the probabilities we have mentioned above can
only operate in a controlled environment where there is a conscious
mechanism directing the beginning, the end, and each intermediate
stage of the process, and where only "the selection of the amino
acids" is left to chance. It is clearly impossible for such an environment
to exist under natural conditions. Therefore the formation of a
protein in the natural environment is logically and technically
impossible.
Since some people are unable to take a broad view of
these matters, but approach them from a superficial viewpoint and
assume protein formation to be a simple chemical reaction, they
may make unrealistic deductions such as "amino acids combine by
way of reaction and then form proteins." However, accidental chemical
reactions taking place in a nonliving structure can only lead to
simple and primitive changes. The number of these is predetermined
and limited. For a somewhat more complex chemical material, huge
factories, chemical plants, and laboratories have to be involved.
Medicines and many other chemical materials that we use in our daily
life are made in just this way. Proteins have much more complex
structures than these chemicals produced by industry. Therefore,
it is impossible for proteins, each of which is a wonder of design
and engineering, in which every part takes its place in a fixed
order, to originate as a result of haphazard chemical reactions.
Let us for a minute put aside all the impossibilities
we have described so far, and suppose that a useful protein molecule
still evolved spontaneously "by accident." Even so, evolution again
has no answers, because in order for this protein to survive, it
would need to be isolated from its natural habitat and be protected
under very special conditions. Otherwise, it would either disintegrate
from exposure to natural conditions on earth, or else join with
other acids, amino acids, or chemical compounds, thereby losing
its particular properties and turning into a totally different and
useless substance.
What we have been discussing so far is the impossibility
of just one protein's coming about by chance. However, in the human
body alone there are some 100,000 proteins functioning. Furthermore,
there are about 1.5 million species named, and another 10 million
are believed to exist. Although many similar proteins are used in
many life forms, it is estimated that there must be 100 million
or more types of protein in the plant and animal worlds. And the
millions of species which have already become extinct are not included
in this calculation. In other words, hundreds of millions of protein
codes have existed in the world. If one considers that not even
one protein can be explained by chance, it is clear what the existence
of hundreds of millions of different proteins must mean.
Bearing this truth in mind, it can clearly be understood
that such concepts as "coincidence" and "chance" have nothing to
do with the existence of living things.
The Evolutionary Argument about the Origin of Life
Above all, there is one important point to take into
consideration: If any one step in the evolutionary process is proven
to be impossible, this is sufficient to prove that the whole theory
is totally false and invalid. For instance, by proving that the
haphazard formation of proteins is impossible, all other claims
regarding the subsequent steps of evolution are also refuted. After
this, it becomes meaningless to take some human and ape skulls and
engage in speculation about them.
How living organisms came into existence out of nonliving
matter was an issue that evolutionists did not even want to mention
for a long time. However, this question, which had constantly been
avoided, eventually had to be addressed, and attempts were made
to settle it with a series of experiments in the second quarter
of the twentieth century.
The main question was: How could the first living cell
have appeared in the primordial atmosphere on the earth? In other
words, what kind of explanation could evolutionists offer?
The first person to take the matter in hand was the
Russian biologist Alexander I. Oparin, the founder of the concept
of "chemical evolution." Despite all his theoretical studies, Oparin
was unable to produce any results to shed light on the origin of
life. He says the following in his book The Origin of Life, published
in 1936:
Unfortunately, however, the problem
of the origin of the cell is perhaps the most obscure point in the
whole study of the evolution of organisms.250
Since Oparin, evolutionists have performed countless
experiments, conducted research, and made observations to prove
that a cell could have been formed by chance. However, every such
attempt only made the complex design of the cell clearer, and thus
refuted the evolutionists' hypotheses even more. Professor Klaus
Dose, the president of the Institute of Biochemistry at the University
of Johannes Gutenberg, states:
More than 30 years of experimentation
on the origin of life in the fields of chemical and molecular evolution
have led to a better perception of the immensity of the problem
of the origin of life on earth rather than to its solution. At present
all discussions on principal theories and experiments in the field
either end in stalemate or in a confession of ignorance.251
In his book The End of Science,
the evolutionary science writer John Horgan says of the origin of
life, "This is by far the weakest strut of the chassis of modern
biology."252
The following statement by the geochemist Jeffrey Bada,
from the San Diego-based Scripps Institute, makes the helplessness
of evolutionists clear:
Today, as we leave the twentieth
century, we still face the biggest unsolved problem that we had
when we entered the twentieth century: How did life originate on
Earth?253
Let us now look at the details of the theory of evolution's
"biggest unsolved problem". The first subject we have to consider
is the famous Miller experiment.
Miller's Experiment

Stanley Miller with his experimental apparatus. |
The most generally respected study on the origin of
life is the Miller experiment conducted by the American researcher
Stanley Miller in 1953. (The experiment is also known as the "Urey-Miller
experiment" because of the contribution of Miller's instructor at
the University of Chicago, Harold Urey.) This experiment is the
only "evidence" evolutionists have with which to allegedly prove
the "chemical evolution thesis"; they advance it as the first stage
of the supposed evolutionary process leading to life. Although nearly
half a century has passed, and great technological advances have
been made, nobody has made any further progress. In spite of this,
Miller's experiment is still taught in textbooks as the evolutionary
explanation of the earliest generation of living things. That is
because, aware of the fact that such studies do not support, but
rather actually refute, their thesis, evolutionist researchers deliberately
avoid embarking on such experiments.
Stanley Miller's aim was to demonstrate by means of
an experiment that amino acids, the building blocks of proteins,
could have come into existence "by chance" on the lifeless earth
billions of years ago. In his experiment, Miller used a gas mixture
that he assumed to have existed on the primordial earth (but which
later proved unrealistic), composed of ammonia, methane, hydrogen,
and water vapor. Since these gases would not react with each other
under natural conditions, he added energy to the mixture to start
a reaction among them. Supposing that this energy could have come
from lightning in the primordial atmosphere, he used an electric
current for this purpose.
Miller heated this gas mixture at 100°C for a week
and added the electrical current. At the end of the week, Miller
analyzed the chemicals which had formed at the bottom of the jar,
and observed that three out of the 20 amino acids which constitute
the basic elements of proteins had been synthesized.
This experiment aroused great excitement among evolutionists,
and was promoted as an outstanding success. Moreover, in a state
of intoxicated euphoria, various publications carried headlines
such as "Miller creates life." However, what Miller had managed
to synthesize was only a few inanimate molecules.
Encouraged by this experiment, evolutionists immediately
produced new scenarios. Stages following the development of amino
acids were hurriedly hypothesized. Supposedly, amino acids had later
united in the correct sequences by accident to form proteins. Some
of these proteins which emerged by chance formed themselves into
cell membrane-like structures which "somehow" came into existence
and formed a primitive cell. These cells then supposedly came together
over time to form multicellular living organisms.
However, Miller's experiment has since proven to be
false in many respects.
Four Facts That Invalidate Miller's Experiment
Miller's experiment sought to prove that amino acids
could form on their own in primordial earth-like conditions, but
it contains inconsistencies in a number of areas:
1- By using a mechanism called a "cold trap," Miller
isolated the amino acids from the environment as soon as they were
formed. Had he not done so, the conditions in the environment in
which the amino acids were formed would immediately have destroyed
these molecules.
Doubtless, this kind of conscious
isolation mechanism did not exist on the primordial earth. Without
such a mechanism, even if one amino acid were obtained, it would
immediately have been destroyed. The chemist Richard Bliss expresses
this contradiction by observing that "Actually, without this trap,
the chemical products, would have been destroyed by the energy source."254
And, sure enough, in his previous experiments, Miller had been unable
to make even one single amino acid using the same materials without
the cold trap mechanism.
2- The primordial atmosphere that Miller attempted
to simulate in his experiment was not realistic. In the 1980s, scientists
agreed that nitrogen and carbon dioxide should have been used in
this artificial environment instead of methane and ammonia.
So why did Miller insist on these gases? The answer
is simple: without ammonia, it was impossible to synthesize any
amino acid. Kevin Mc Kean talks about this in an article published
in Discover magazine:
Miller and Urey imitated the ancient
atmosphere on the Earth with a mixture of methane and ammonia. ...However
in the latest studies, it has been understood that the Earth was
very hot at those times, and that it was composed of melted nickel
and iron. Therefore, the chemical atmosphere of that time should
have been formed mostly of nitrogen (N2), carbon dioxide
(CO2) and water vapour (H2O). However these
are not as appropriate as methane and ammonia for the production
of organic molecules.255
The artificial atmosphere created by Miller
in his experiment actually bore not the slightest resemblance
to the primitive atmosphere on earth. |
The American scientists J.
P. Ferris and C. T. Chen repeated Miller's experiment with an atmospheric
environment that contained carbon dioxide, hydrogen, nitrogen, and
water vapor, and were unable to obtain even a single amino acid
molecule.256
3- Another important point that
invalidates Miller's experiment is that there was enough oxygen
to destroy all the amino acids in the atmosphere at the time when
they were thought to have been formed. This fact, overlooked by
Miller, is revealed by the traces of oxidized iron found in rocks
that are estimated to be 3.5 billion years old.257
There are other findings showing that the amount of
oxygen in the atmosphere at that time was much higher than originally
claimed by evolutionists. Studies also show that the amount of ultraviolet
radiation to which the earth was then exposed was 10,000 times more
than evolutionists' estimates. This intense radiation would unavoidably
have freed oxygen by decomposing the water vapor and carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere.
This situation completely negates Miller's experiment,
in which oxygen was completely neglected. If oxygen had been used
in the experiment, methane would have decomposed into carbon dioxide
and water, and ammonia into nitrogen and water. On the other hand,
in an environment where there was no oxygen, there would be no ozone
layer either; therefore, the amino acids would have immediately
been destroyed, since they would have been exposed to the most intense
ultraviolet rays without the protection of the ozone layer. In other
words, with or without oxygen in the primordial world, the result
would have been a deadly environment for the amino acids.
4- At the end of Miller's experiment, many organic
acids had also been formed with characteristics detrimental to the
structure and function of living things. If the amino acids had
not been isolated, and had been left in the same environment with
these chemicals, their destruction or transformation into different
compounds through chemical reactions would have been unavoidable.
Moreover, Miller's experiment also
produced right-handed amino acids.258 The existence
of these amino acids refuted the theory even within its own terms,
because right-handed amino acids cannot function in the composition
of living organisms. To conclude, the circumstances in which amino
acids were formed in Miller's experiment were not suitable for life.
In truth, this medium took the form of an acidic mixture destroying
and oxidizing the useful molecules obtained.
Today, Miller too accepts that his 1953
experiment was very far from explaining the origin of life. |
All these facts point to one firm truth: Miller's experiment
cannot claim to have proved that living things formed by chance
under primordial earth-like conditions. The whole experiment is
nothing more than a deliberate and controlled laboratory experiment
to synthesize amino acids. The amount and types of the gases used
in the experiment were ideally determined to allow amino acids to
originate. The amount of energy supplied to the system was neither
too much nor too little, but arranged precisely to enable the necessary
reactions to occur. The experimental apparatus was isolated, so
that it would not allow the leaking of any harmful, destructive,
or any other kind of elements to hinder the formation of amino acids.
No elements, minerals or compounds that were likely to have been
present on the primordial earth, but which would have changed the
course of the reactions, were included in the experiment. Oxygen,
which would have prevented the formation of amino acids because
of oxidation, is only one of these destructive elements. Even under
such ideal laboratory conditions, it was impossible for the amino
acids produced to survive and avoid destruction without the "cold
trap" mechanism.
In fact, by his experiment, Miller destroyed evolution's
claim that "life emerged as the result of unconscious coincidences."
That is because, if the experiment proves anything, it is that amino
acids can only be produced in a controlled laboratory environment
where all the conditions are specifically designed by conscious
intervention.
Today, Miller's experiment is totally disregarded even
by evolutionist scientists. In the February 1998 issue of the famous
evolutionist science journal Earth, the following statements appear
in an article titled "Life's Crucible":
Geologist now think that the primordial
atmosphere consisted mainly of carbon dioxide and nitrogen, gases
that are less reactive than those used in the 1953 experiment. And
even if Miller's atmosphere could have existed, how do you get simple
molecules such as amino acids to go through the necessary chemical
changes that will convert them into more complicated compounds,
or polymers, such as proteins? Miller himself throws up his hands
at that part of the puzzle. "It's a problem," he sighs with exasperation.
"How do you make polymers? That's not so easy."259
As seen, today even Miller himself has accepted that
his experiment does not lead to an explanation of the origin of
life. In the March 1998 issue of National Geographic, in an article
titled "The Emergence of Life on Earth," the following comments
appear:
Many scientists now suspect that the early atmosphere
was different to what Miller first supposed. They think it consisted
of carbon dioxide and nitrogen rather than hydrogen, methane, and
ammonia.
That's bad news for chemists. When
they try sparking carbon dioxide and nitrogen, they get a paltry
amount of organic molecules - the equivalent of dissolving a drop
of food colouring in a swimming pool of water. Scientists find it
hard to imagine life emerging from such a diluted soup.260
In brief, neither Miller's experiment, nor any other
similar one that has been attempted, can answer the question of
how life emerged on earth. All of the research that has been done
shows that it is impossible for life to emerge by chance, and thus
confirms that life is created. The reason evolutionists do not accept
this obvious reality is their blind adherence to prejudices that
are totally unscientific. Interestingly enough, Harold Urey, who
organized the Miller experiment with his student Stanley Miller,
made the following confession on this subject:
All of us who study the origin of
life find that the more we look into it, the more we feel it is
too complex to have evolved anywhere. We all believe as an article
of faith that life evolved from dead matter on this planet. It is
just that its complexity is so great, it is hard for us to imagine
that it did.261
The Primordial Atmosphere and Proteins
Evolutionist sources use the Miller experiment, despite
all of its inconsistencies, to try to gloss over the question of
the origin of amino acids. By giving the impression that the issue
has long since been resolved by that invalid experiment, they try
to paper over the cracks in the theory of evolution.
However, to explain the second stage of the origin
of life, evolutionists faced an even greater problem than that of
the formation of amino acids-namely, the origin of proteins, the
building blocks of life, which are composed of hundreds of different
amino acids bonding with each other in a particular order.
Claiming that proteins were formed by chance under
natural conditions is even more unrealistic and unreasonable than
claiming that amino acids were formed by chance. In the preceding
pages we have seen the mathematical impossibility of the haphazard
uniting of amino acids in proper sequences to form proteins with
probability calculations. Now, we will examine the impossibility
of proteins being produced chemically under primordial earth conditions.
The Problem of Protein Synthesis in Water
As we saw before, when combining to form proteins,
amino acids form a special bond with one another called the peptide
bond. A water molecule is released during the formation of this
peptide bond.
This fact definitely refutes the evolutionist explanation
that primordial life originated in water, because, according to
the "Le Châtelier principle" in chemistry, it is not possible for
a reaction that releases water (a condensation reaction) to take
place in a hydrous environment. The chances of this kind of a reaction
happening in a hydrate environment is said to "have the least probability
of occurring" of all chemical reactions.
Hence the ocean, which is claimed
to be where life began and amino acids originated, is definitely
not an appropriate setting for amino acids to form proteins.262
On the other hand, it would be irrational for evolutionists to change
their minds and claim that life originated on land, because the
only environment where amino acids could have been protected from
ultraviolet radiation is in the oceans and seas. On land, they would
be destroyed by ultraviolet rays. The Le Châtelier principle, on
the other hand, disproves the claim of the formation of life in
the sea. This is another dilemma confronting evolution.

 |
FOX'S "PROTEINOIDS"
Sydney Fox, who was influenced by Miller's scenario,
formed the above molecules, which he called "proteinoids,"
by joining amino acids together. However, these chains
of nonfunctioning amino acids had no resemblance to
the real proteins that make up the bodies of living
things. Actually, all these efforts showed not only
that life did not come about by chance, but also that
it could not be reproduced in laboratory conditions.
|
|
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Fox's Experiment
Challenged by the above dilemma, evolutionists began
to invent unrealistic scenarios based on this "water problem" that
so definitively refuted their theories. Sydney Fox was one of the
best known of these researchers. Fox advanced the following theory
to solve the problem. According to him, the first amino acids must
have been transported to some cliffs near a volcano right after
their formation in the primordial ocean. The water contained in
this mixture that included the amino acids must have evaporated
when the temperature increased above boiling point on the cliffs.
The amino acids which were "dried out" in this way, could then have
combined to form proteins.
However this "complicated" way out was not accepted
by many people in the field, because the amino acids could not have
endured such high temperatures. Research confirmed that amino acids
are immediately destroyed at very high temperatures.
But Fox did not give up. He combined purified
amino acids in the laboratory, "under very special conditions,"
by heating them in a dry environment. The amino acids combined,
but still no proteins were obtained. What he actually ended up with
was simple and disordered loops of amino acids, arbitrarily combined
with each other, and these loops were far from resembling any living
protein. Furthermore, if Fox had kept the amino acids at a steady
temperature, then these useless loops would also have disintegrated.
Another point that nullified the experiment was that
Fox did not use the useless end products obtained in Miller's experiment;
rather, he used pure amino acids from living organisms. This experiment,
however, which was intended to be a continuation of Miller's experiment,
should have started out from the results obtained by Miller. Yet
neither Fox, nor any other researcher, used the useless amino acids
Miller produced.
Fox's experiment was not even welcomed in evolutionist
circles, because it was clear that the meaningless amino acid chains
that he obtained (which he termed "proteinoids") could not have
formed under natural conditions. Moreover, proteins, the basic units
of life, still could not be produced. The problem of the origin
of proteins remained unsolved. In an article in the popular science
magazine, Chemical Engineering News, which appeared in the 1970s,
Fox's experiment was mentioned as follows:

When Watson and Crick discovered the structure of DNA, they
revealed that life was much more complicated than had previously
been thought. |
Sydney Fox and the other researchers managed
to unite the amino acids in the shape of "proteinoids" by using
very special heating techniques under conditions which in fact did
not exist at all in the primordial stages of Earth. Also, they are
not at all similar to the very regular proteins present in living
things. They are nothing but useless, irregular chemical stains.
It was explained that even if such molecules had formed in the early
ages, they would definitely be destroyed.263
Indeed, the proteinoids Fox obtained were totally different
from real proteins, both in structure and function. The difference
between proteins and these proteinoids was as huge as the difference
between a piece of high-tech equipment and a heap of unprocessed
iron.
Furthermore, there was no chance that even these irregular
amino acid chains could have survived in the primordial atmosphere.
Harmful and destructive physical and chemical effects caused by
heavy exposure to ultraviolet light and other unstable natural conditions
would have caused these proteinoids to disintegrate. Because of
the Le Châtelier principle, it was also impossible for the amino
acids to combine underwater, where ultraviolet rays would not reach
them. In view of this, the idea that the proteinoids were the basis
of life eventually lost support among scientists.
The Origin of the DNA Molecule
Our examinations so far have shown that the theory
of evolution is in a serious quandary at the molecular level. Evolutionists
have shed no light on the formation of amino acids at all. The formation
of proteins, on the other hand, is another mystery all its own.
Yet the problems are not even limited just to amino
acids and proteins: These are only the beginning. Beyond them, the
extremely complex structure of the cell leads evolutionists to yet
another impasse. The reason for this is that the cell is not just
a heap of amino-acid-structured proteins, but rather the most complex
system man has ever encountered.
While the theory of evolution was having such trouble
providing a coherent explanation for the existence of the molecules
that are the basis of the cell structure, developments in the science
of genetics and the discovery of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) produced
brand-new problems for the theory. In 1953, James Watson and Francis
Crick launched a new age in biology with their work on the structure
of DNA.
The molecule known as DNA, which is found in the nucleus of each
of the 100 trillion cells in our bodies, contains the complete blueprint
for the construction of the human body. The information regarding
all the characteristics of a person, from physical appearance to
the structure of the inner organs, is recorded in DNA within the
sequence of four special bases that make up the giant molecule.
These bases are known as A, T, G, and C, according to the initial
letters of their names. All the structural differences among people
depend on variations in the sequences of these letters. In addition
to features such as height, and eye, hair and skin colors, the DNA
in a single cell also contains the design of the 206 bones, the
600 muscles, the 100 billion nerve cells (neurons), 1.000 trillion
connections between the neurons of the brain, 97,000 kilometers
of veins, and the 100 trillion cells of the human body. If we were
to write down the information coded in DNA, then we would have to
compile a giant library consisting of 900 volumes of 500 pages each.
But the information this enormous library would hold is encoded
inside the DNA molecules in the cell nucleus, which is far smaller
than the 1/100th-of-a-millimeter-long cell itself.
DNA Cannot Be Explained by Non-Design
At this point, there is an important detail that deserves attention.
An error in the sequence of the nucleotides making up a gene would
render that gene completely useless. When it is considered that
there are 200,000 genes in the human body, it becomes clearer how
impossible it is for the millions of nucleotides making up these
genes to have been formed, in the right sequence, by chance. The
evolutionary biologist Frank Salisbury has comments on this impossibility:
The extraordinary information concealed
in DNA is clear proof that life did not emerge by chance,
but was deliberately designed. No natural process can account
for the origin of DNA. |
A medium protein might include
about 300 amino acids. The DNA gene controlling this would have
about 1,000 nucleotides in its chain. Since there are four kinds
of nucleotides in a DNA chain, one consisting of 1,000 links could
exist in 41,000 forms. Using a little algebra (logarithms)
we can see that 41,000=10600. Ten multiplied
by itself 600 times gives the figure 1 followed by 600 zeros! This
number is completely beyond our comprehension.264
The number 41,000 is the equivalent of 10600.
This means 1 followed by 600 zeros. As 1 with 12 zeros after it
indicates a trillion, 600 zeros represents an inconceivable number.
The impossibility of the formation of RNA and DNA by
a coincidental accumulation of nucleotides is expressed by the French
scientist Paul Auger in this way:
We have to sharply distinguish the
two stages in the chance formation of complex molecules such as
nucleotides by chemical events. The production of nucleotides one
by one-which is possible-and the combination of these within very
special sequences. The second is absolutely impossible.265
The extraordinary information concealed
in DNA is clear proof that life did not emerge by chance,
but was deliberately designed. No natural process can account
for the origin of DNA. |
For many years, Francis Crick believed in the theory of molecular
evolution, but eventually even he had to admit to himself that such
a complex molecule could not have emerged spontaneously by chance,
as the result of an evolutionary process:
An honest man, armed with
all the knowledge available to us now, could only state that, in
some sense, the origin of life appears at the moment to be almost
a miracle.266
The Turkish evolutionist Professor Ali Demirsoy was
forced to make the following confession on the issue:
In fact, the probability of the
formation of a protein and a nucleic acid (DNA-RNA) is a probability
way beyond estimating. Furthermore, the chance of the emergence
of a certain protein chain is so slight as to be called astronomic.267
A very interesting paradox emerges at this point: While
DNA can only replicate with the help of special proteins (enzymes),
the synthesis of these proteins can only be realized by the information
encoded in DNA. As they both depend on each other, they have to
exist at the same time for replication. Science writer John Horgan
explains the dilemma in this way:
DNA cannot do its work, including
forming more DNA, without the help of catalyticproteins, or enzymes.
In short, proteins cannot form without DNA, but neither can DNA
form without proteins.268
This situation once again undermines the scenario that
life could have come about by accident. Homer Jacobson, Professor
Emeritus of Chemistry, comments:
Directions for the reproduction
of plans, for energy and the extraction of parts from the current
environment, for the growth sequence, and for the effector mechanism
translating instructions into growth-all had to be simultaneously
present at that moment [when life began]. This combination of events
has seemed an incredibly unlikely happenstance...269
The quotation above was written two years after the
discovery of the structure of DNA by Watson and Crick. But despite
all the developments in science, this problem for evolutionists
remains unsolved. This is why German biochemist Douglas R. Hofstadter
says:
'How did the Genetic Code, along
with the mechanisms for its translation (ribosomes and RNA molecules),
originate?' For the moment, we will have to content ourselves with
a sense of wonder and awe, rather than with an answer.270
Stanley Miller and Francis Crick's close associate
from the University of San Diego, California, the highly reputed
evolutionist Dr. Leslie Orgel says in an article published in 1994:
It is extremely improbable that
proteins and nucleic acids, both of which are structurally complex,
arose spontaneously in the same place at the same time. Yet it also
seems impossible to have one without the other. And so, at first
glance, one might have to conclude that life could never, in fact,
have originated by chemical means.271
Alongside all of this, it is chemically impossible
for nucleic acids such as DNA and RNA, which possess a definite
string of information, to have emerged by chance, or for even one
of the nucleotides which compose them to have come about by accident
and to have survived and maintained its unadulterated state under
the conditions of the primordial world. Even the famous journal
Scientific American, which follows an evolutionist line, has been
obliged to confess the doubts of evolutionists on this subject:
Even the simpler molecules are produced
only in small amounts in realistic experiments simulating possible
primitive earth conditions. What is worse, these molecules are generally
minor constituents of tars: It remains problematical how they could
have been separated and purified through geochemical processes whose
normal effects are to make organic mixtures more and more of a jumble.
With somewhat more complex molecules these difficulties rapidly
increase. In particular a purely geochemical origin of nucleotides
(the subunits of DNA and RNA) presents great difficulties.272
Of course, the statement "it is quite impossible for
life to have emerged by chemical means" simply means that life is
the product of an intelligent design. This "chemical evolution"
that evolutionists have been talking about since the beginning of
the last century never happened, and is nothing but a myth.
But most evolutionists believe in this and similar
totally unscientific fairy tales as if they were true, because accepting
intelligent design means accepting creation-and they have conditioned
themselves not to accept this truth. One famous biologist from Australia,
Michael Denton, discusses the subject in his book Evolution: A Theory
in Crisis:
To the skeptic, the proposition
that the genetic programmes of higher organisms, consisting of something
close to a thousand million bits of information, equivalent to the
sequence of letters in a small library of 1,000 volumes, containing
in encoded form countless thousands of intricate algorithms controlling,
specifying, and ordering the growth and development of billions
and billions of cells into the form of a complex organism, were
composed by a purely random process is simply an affront to reason.
But to the Darwinist, the idea is accepted without a ripple of doubt
- the paradigm takes precedence!273
The Invalidity of the RNA World
The discovery in the 1970s that the gases originally
existing in the primitive atmosphere of the earth would have rendered
amino acid synthesis impossible was a serious blow to the theory
of molecular evolution. Evolutionists then had to face the fact
that the "primitive atmosphere experiments" by Stanley Miller, Sydney
Fox, Cyril Ponnamperuma and others were invalid. For this reason,
in the 1980s the evolutionists tried again. As a result, the "RNA
World" hypothesis was advanced. This scenario proposed that, not
proteins, but rather the RNA molecules that contained the information
for proteins, were formed first.
According to this scenario, advanced by Harvard chemist
Walter Gilbert in 1986, inspired by the discovery about "ribozymes"
by Thomas Cech, billions of years ago an RNA molecule capable of
replicating itself formed somehow by accident. Then this RNA molecule
started to produce proteins, having been activated by external influences.
Thereafter, it became necessary to store this information in a second
molecule, and somehow the DNA molecule emerged to do that.
Made up as it is of a chain of impossibilities in each
and every stage, this scarcely credible scenario, far from providing
any explanation of the origin of life, only magnified the problem,
and raised many unanswerable questions:
1. Since it is impossible to accept the coincidental
formation of even one of the nucleotides making up RNA, how can
it be possible for these imaginary nucleotides to form RNA by coming
together in a particular sequence? Evolutionist John Horgan admits
the impossibility of the chance formation of RNA;
As researchers continue to examine
the RNA-World concept closely, more problems emerge. How did RNA
initially arise? RNA and its components are difficult to synthesize
in a laboratory under the best of conditions, much less under really
plausible ones.274
2. Even if we suppose that it formed by chance, how
could this RNA, consisting of just a nucleotide chain, have "decided"
to self-replicate, and with what kind of mechanism could it have
carried out this self-replicating process? Where did it find the
nucleotides it used while self-replicating? Even evolutionist microbiologists
Gerald Joyce and Leslie Orgel express the desperate nature of the
situtation in their book In the RNA World:
This discussion… has, in a sense,
focused on a straw man: the myth of a self-replicating RNA molecule
that arose de novo from a soup of random polynucleotides. Not only
is such a notion unrealistic in light of our current understanding
of prebiotic chemistry, but it would strain the credulity of even
an optimist's view of RNA's catalytic potential.275
3. Even if we suppose that there was self-replicating
RNA in the primordial world, that numerous amino acids of every
type ready to be used by RNA were available, and that all of these
impossibilities somehow took place, the situation still does not
lead to the formation of even one single protein. For RNA only includes
information concerning the structure of proteins. Amino acids, on
the other hand, are raw materials. Nevertheless, there is no mechanism
for the production of proteins. To consider the existence of RNA
sufficient for protein production is as nonsensical as expecting
a car to assemble itself by simply throwing the blueprint onto a
heap of parts piled up on top of each other. A blueprint cannot
produce a car all by itself without a factory and workers to assemble
the parts according to the instructions contained in the blueprint;
in the same way, the blueprint contained in RNA cannot produce proteins
by itself without the cooperation of other cellular components which
follow the instructions contained in the RNA.
Proteins are produced in the ribosome factory with
the help of many enzymes, and as a result of extremely complex processes
within the cell. The ribosome is a complex cell organelle made up
of proteins. This leads, therefore, to another unreasonable supposition-that
ribosomes, too, should have come into existence by chance at the
same time. Even Nobel Prize winner Jacques Monod, who was one of
the most fanatical defenders of evolution-and atheism-explained
that protein synthesis can by no means be considered to depend merely
on the information in the nucleic acids:
The code is meaningless unless translated.
The modern cell's translating machinery consists of at least 50
macromolecular components, which are themselves coded in DNA: the
code cannot be translated otherwise than by products of translation
themselves. It is the modern expression of omne vivum ex ovo. When
and how did this circle become closed? It is exceedingly difficult
to imagine.276
How could an RNA chain in the primordial world have
taken such a decision, and what methods could it have employed to
make protein production happen by doing the work of 50 specialized
particles on its own? Evolutionists have no answer to these questions.
One article in the preeminent scientific journal Nature makes it
clear that the concept of "self-replicating RNA" is a complete product
of fantasy, and that actually this kind of RNA has not been produced
in any experiment:
DNA replication is so error-prone
that it needs the prior existence of protein enzymes to improve
the copying fidelity of a gene-size piece of DNA. "Catch-22" say
Maynard Smith and Szathmary. So, wheel on RNA with its now recognized
properties of carrying both informational and enzymatic activity,
leading the authors to state: "In essence, the first RNA molecules
did not need a protein polymerase to replicate them; they replicated
themselves." Is this a fact or a hope? I would have thought it relevant
to point out for 'biologists in general' that not one self-replicating
RNA has emerged to date from quadrillions (1024) of artificially
synthesized, random RNA sequences.277
Dr. Leslie Orgel, one of the associates of Stanley
Miller and Francis Crick from the University of California at San
Diego, uses the term "scenario" for the possibility of "the origination
of life through the RNA World." Orgel described what kind of features
this RNA would have had to have and how impossible these would have
been in his article "The Origin of Life," published in Scientific
American in October 1994:
This scenario could have occurred,
we noted, if prebiotic RNA had two properties not evident today:
A capacity to replicate without the help of proteins and an ability
to catalyze every step of protein synthesis.278
As should by now be clear, to expect these two complex
and extremely essential processes from a molecule such as RNA is
againt scientific thought. Concrete scientific facts, on the other
hand, makes it explicit that the RNA World hypothesis, which is
a new model proposed for the chance formation of life, is an equally
implausible fable.
John Horgan, in his book The End of Science, reports
that Stanley Miller viewed the theories subsequently put forward
regarding the origin of life as quite meaningless (It will be recalled
that Miller was the originator of the famous Miller Experiment,
which was later revealed to be invalid.):
In fact, almost 40 years after his
original experiment, Miller told me that solving the riddle of the
origin of life had turned out to be more difficult than he or anyone
else had envisioned… Miller seemed unimpressed with any of the current
proposals on the origin of life, referring to them as "nonsense"
or "paper chemistry." He was so contemptuous of some hypotheses
that, when I asked his opinion of them, he merely shook his head,
sighed deeply, and snickered-as if overcome by the folly of humanity.
Stuart Kauffman's theory of autocatalysis fell into this category.
"Running equations through a computer does not constitute an experiment,"
Miller sniffed. Miller acknowledged that scientists may never know
precisely where and when life emerged.279
This statement, by a pioneer of the struggle to find
an evolutionary explanation for the origin of life, clearly reflects
the despair felt by evolutionist scientists over the cul-de-sac
they find themselves in.
Can Design Be Explained by Coincidence?
So far, we have examined how impossible the accidental formation
of life is. Let us again ignore these impossibilities for just a
moment. Let us suppose that millions of years ago a cell was formed
which had acquired everything necessary for life, and that it duly
"came to life." Evolution again collapses at this point. For even
if this cell had existed for a while, it would eventually have died
and after its death, nothing would have remained, and everything
would have reverted to where it had started. This is because this
first living cell, lacking any genetic information, would not have
been able to reproduce and start a new generation. Life would have
ended with its death.

This illustration shows the sketch of the chemical reactions
taking place in a single cell. These intricate activities
in the cell, which can only be viewed with an electron microscope,
continue to take place flawlessly and ceaselessly. |
The genetic system does not only consist of DNA. The
following things must also exist in the same environment: enzymes
to read the code on the DNA, messenger RNA to be produced after
reading these codes, a ribosome to which messenger RNA will attach
according to this code, transfer RNA to transfer the amino acids
to the ribosome for use in production, and extremely complex enzymes
to carry out numerous intermediary processes. Such an environment
cannot exist anywhere apart from a totally isolated and completely
controlled environment such as the cell, where all the essential
raw materials and energy resources exist.
As a result, organic matter can self-reproduce only
if it exists as a fully developed cell, with all its organelles.
This means that the first cell on earth was formed "all of a sudden,"
together with its incredibly complex structure.
So, if a complex structure came into existence all
of a sudden, what does this mean?
Let us ask this question with an example. Let us liken
the cell to a high-tech car in terms of its complexity. (In fact,
the cell is a much more complex and developed system than a car
.) Now let us ask the following question: What would you think if
you went out hiking in the depths of a thick forest and ran across
a brand-new car among the trees? Would you imagine that various
elements in the forest had come together by chance over millions
of years and produced such a vehicle? All the parts in the car are
made of products such as iron, copper, and rubber-the raw ingredients
for which are all found on the earth-but would this fact lead you
to think that these materials had synthesized "by chance" and then
come together and manufactured such a car?
There is no doubt that anyone with a sound mind would
realize that the car was the product of an intelligent design-in
other words, a factory-and wonder what it was doing there in the
middle of the forest. The sudden emergence of a complex structure
in a complete form, quite out of the blue, shows that this is the
work of an intelligent design.
Believing that pure chance can produce perfect designs
goes well beyond the bounds of reason. Yet every "explanation" put
forward by the theory of evolution regarding the origin of life
is like that. One outspoken authority on this issue is the famous
French zoologist Pierre-Paul Grassé, the former president of the
French Academy of Sciences. Grassé is an evolutionist, yet he acknowledges
that Darwinist theory is unable to explain life and makes a point
about the logic of "coincidence," which is the backbone of Darwinism:
The opportune appearance of mutations
permitting animals and plants to meet their needs seems hard to
believe. Yet the Darwinian theory is even more demanding: A single
plant, a single animal would require thousands and thousands of
lucky, appropriate events. Thus, miracles would become the rule:
events with an infinitesimal probability could not fail to occur…
There is no law against daydreaming, but science must not indulge
in it.280
All living things in the world, all of which are clear
examples of the intelligent planning we have just been discussing,
are at the same time living evidence that coincidence can have no
role to play in their existence. Each of its component parts-never
mind a whole living creature-contains structures and systems so
complex that they cannot be the work of coincidence. We need go
no further than our own bodies to find examples of this.
One example of this is our eyes. The human eye sees
by the working together of some 40 separate parts. If one of these
is not present, the eye will be useless. Each of these 40 parts
possesses complicated designs within itself. The retina at the back
of the eye, for instance, is made up of 11 layers. Each layer has
a different function. The chemical processes that go on inside the
retina are so complex that they can only be explained with pages
full of formulae and diagrams.
The theory of evolution is unable to account for the
emergence of even such a flawless and complex structure as a single
eye by means of "accident," let alone life itself, or mankind.
So, what does this extraordinary design in living things
prove to us about the origin of life? As we made clear in the opening
part of this book, only two different accounts can be given regarding
the origin of life. One is evolution, the other intelligent creation.
Since the evolution claim is impossible, scientific discoveries
therefore prove the truth of creation. This truth may surprise some
scientists, who from the nineteenth century to the present have
seen the concept of "creation" as unscientific, but science can
only progress by overcoming shocks of this kind and accepting the
truth. Chandra Wickramasinghe describes the reality he faced as
a scientist who had been told throughout his life that life had
emerged as a result of chance coincidences:
From my earliest training as a scientist,
I was very strongly brainwashed to believe that science cannot be
consistent with any kind of deliberate creation. That notion has
had to be painfully shed. At the moment, I can't find any rational
argument to knock down the view which argues for conversion to God.
We used to have an open mind; now we realize that the only logical
answer to life is creation - and not accidental random shuffling.281
237
Michael Denton, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, Burnett Books, London,
1985, pp. 328, 342.
238 Charles Darwin, Life and Letter of Charles
Darwin, vol. II, From Charles Darwin to J. Do Hooker, March 29,
1863
239 W. R. Bird, The Origin of Species Revisited,
Thomas Nelson Co., Nashville, 1991, pp. 298-99.
240 "Hoyle on Evolution," Nature, vol. 294, November
12, 1981, p. 105.
241 H. Blum, Time's Arrow and Evolution, 158 (3d
ed. 1968), cited in W. R. Bird, The Origin of Species Revisited,
Thomas Nelson Co., Nashville, 1991, p. 304. (emphasis added)
242 W. Stokes, Essentials of Earth History, 186
(4th ed. 1942), cited in W. R. Bird, The Origin of Species Revisited,
Thomas Nelson Co., Nashville, 1991, p. 305.
243 J. D. Thomas, Evolution and Faith, ACU Press,
Abilene, TX, 1988, pp. 81-82. (emphasis added)
244 Robert Shapiro, Origins: A Skeptic's Guide
to the Creation of Life on Earth, Summit Books, New York, 1986,
p. 127.
245 Fred Hoyle, Chandra Wickramasinghe, Evolution
from Space, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1984, p. 148. (emphasis
added)
246 Fred Hoyle, Chandra Wickramasinghe, Evolution
from Space, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1984, p. 130. (emphasis
added)
247 Simpson, Sarah, "Life's First Scalding Steps,"
Science News, Jan. 9, 1999, 155(2):25.
248 Fabbri Britannica Bilim Ansiklopedisi (Fabbri
Britannica Science Encyclopaedia), vol. 2, no. 22, p. 519.
249 Dawkins, Richard, Climbing Mount Improbable,
W.W. Norton, New York, 1996, p. 283.
250 Alexander I. Oparin, Origin of Life, Dover
Publications, NewYork, 1936, 1953 (reprint), p. 196.
251 Klaus Dose, "The Origin of Life: More Questions
Than Answers," Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, vol. 13, no. 4,
1988, p. 348. (emphasis added)
252 Horgan, John, The End of Science, MA Addison-Wesley,
1996, p. 138. (emphasis added)
253 Jeffrey Bada, Earth, "Life's Crucible," February
1998, p. 40. (emphasis added)
254 Richard B. Bliss, Gary E. Parker, Duane T.
Gish, Origin of Life, C.L.P. Publications, 3rd ed., California,
1990, pp. 14-15.
255 Kevin Mc Kean, Bilim ve Teknik (Science and
Technology), no. 189, p. 7.
256 J. P. Ferris, C. T. Chen, "Photochemistry
of Methane, Nitrogen, and Water Mixture As a Model for the Atmosphere
of the Primitive Earth," Journal of American Chemical Society, vol.
97:11, 1975, p. 2964.
257 "New Evidence on Evolution of Early Atmosphere
and Life," Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, vol.
63, November 1982, pp. 1328-1330.
258 Richard B. Bliss & Gary E. Parker, Duane T.
Gish, Origin of Life, C.L.P. Publications, 3rd ed., California,
1990, p. 16.
259 "Life's Crucible," Earth, February 1998, p.
34. (emphasis added)
260 "The Rise of Life on Earth," National Geographic,
March 1998, p. 68. (emphasis added)
261 W. R. Bird, The Origin of Species Revisited,
Thomas Nelson Co., Nashville, 1991, p. 325.(emphasis added)
262 Richard Dickerson, "Chemical Evolution," Scientific
American, vol. 239:3, 1978, p. 75. Chemist Richard Dickerson explains
the reason for this in this way: "If polymeric chains of proteins
and nucleic acids are to be forged out of their precursor monomers,
a molecule of water must be removed at each link in the chain. It
is therefore hard to see how polymerization could have proceeded
in the aqueous environment of the primitive ocean, since the presence
of water favors depolymerization rather than polymerization."
263 S. W. Fox, K. Harada, G. Kramptiz, G. Mueller,
"Chemical Origin of Cells," Chemical Engineering News, June 22,
1970, p. 80.
264 Frank B. Salisbury, "Doubts about the Modern
Synthetic Theory of Evolution," American Biology Teacher, September
1971, p. 336.
265 Paul Auger, De La Physique Theorique a la
Biologie, 1970, p. 118.
266 Francis Crick, Life Itself: It's Origin and
Nature, New York, Simon & Schuster, 1981, p. 88. (emphasis added)
267 Ali Demirsoy, Kalitim ve Evrim (Inheritance
and Evolution), Meteksan Publishing Co., Ankara, 1984, p. 39.
268 John Horgan, "In the Beginning," Scientific
American, vol. 264, February 1991, p. 119. (emphasis added)
269 Homer Jacobson, "Information, Reproduction
and the Origin of Life," American Scientist, January 1955, p. 121.
270 Douglas R. Hofstadter, Gödel, Escher, Bach:
An Eternal Golden Braid, Vintage Books, New York, 1980, p. 548.
(emphasis added)
271 Leslie E. Orgel, "The Origin of Life on Earth,"
Scientific American, vol. 271, October 1994, p. 78. (emphasis added)
272 Cairns-Smith, Alexander G., "The First Organisms,"
Scientific American, 252: 90, June 1985. (emphasis added)
273 Michael Denton, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis,
London: Burnett Books, 1985, p. 351.
274 John Horgan, "In the Beginning," Scientific
American, vol. 264, February 1991, p. 119.
275 G. F. Joyce, L. E. Orgel, "Prospects for Understanding
the Origin of the RNA World," In the RNA World, Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory Press, New York, 1993, p. 13.
276 Jacques Monod, Chance and Necessity, New York,
1971, p. 143. (emphasis added)
277 Dover, Gabby L., Looping the Evolutionary
loop, review of the origin of life from the birth of life to the
origin of language, Nature, 1999, vol. 399, p. 218. (emphasis added)
278 Leslie E. Orgel, "The Origin of Life on the
Earth," Scientific American, October 1994, vol. 271, p. 78.
279 Horgan, John, The End of Science, MA Addison-Wesley,
1996, p. 139.
280 Pierre-P Grassé, Evolution of Living Organisms,
Academic Press, New York, 1977, p. 103. (emphasis added)
281 Chandra Wickramasinghe, Interview in London
Daily Express, August 14, 1981. |