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07-24-2003, 02:54 PM | #41 | |
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07-24-2003, 03:06 PM | #42 | |||||||||
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Re: Chew on this one...
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07-24-2003, 03:09 PM | #43 |
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Species numbers would be ever increasing, if so many of them would stop dying off. Take Homo sapiens, the only survivor on this particular branch.
As for evolutionism...er, actually you mean abiogenesis. They sound a lot alike... Your first statistic is correct. However the assumption that comes up with that number is dead wrong. Might as well calcualte the chances of a full grown person emerging from the dirt, same improbability. I'm not even going to suggest you go to talkorigins.org to look at a real statistics breakdown of abiogenesis, pre-RNA, and the like...I know you won't. Let's just say that you have to start at a reasonable beginning, not try and make current biology pop up out of nowhere. That would be a miracle. |
07-24-2003, 03:10 PM | #44 | |
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hahaha.....
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..... perhaps you need to learn a little bit about what you arguing against..... ..besides, abiogenesis is DIFFERENT than evolution. |
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07-24-2003, 03:39 PM | #45 | |||||||||||||||||
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Re: Chew on this one...
This looks suspiciously like another plagiarist. And one who's already given up defending his original assertion (common descent) and has instead shifted the goal post back to abiogenesis. *sigh* I'll give it a go anyway.
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And again, where are you getting these calculations? They are bogus; it is not possible to calculate such things with any reasonable degree of accuracy. For example, it's obvious that your so-called calculations use a "tornado-in-a-junkyard" approach. This is bogus because as even most creationists realize, neither proteins nor DNA have to be specified with any tight degree of tolerance. They can tolerate a great deal of variation and still be functional. And it's partly due to the fact that we don't know what the limits of variation are that we can't calculate the odds of protein X having formed. Nor do we have any way of knowing that protein X was necessary for primordial life. The earliest life could have been as simple as a self-replicating RNA strand. Quote:
Chemicals in solution aren't in the "right place". They're just in solution, which means that they move about randomly and constantly. The question is a matter of concentration, which evaporating pools would have easily taken care of. Quote:
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And what is a "properly coded" DNA strand supposed to mean? Quote:
Amino acids are readily created through abiotic processes by the way... Quote:
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theyeti |
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07-24-2003, 04:27 PM | #46 |
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Repeat after me these three simple words, plus one slightly big one:
Ribonucleic. Acid. Came. First. (We are getting a lot of opponents these days. I hope this keeps up. If Oolon had kept it bottled up any longer he'd've burst.) |
07-24-2003, 05:07 PM | #47 |
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Heh, a new paper just out scores one more for the RNA world:
Small Structural Costs for Evolution from RNA to RNP-based Catalysis. edited to add: Shit, make that two: Processivity of ribozyme-catalyzed RNA polymerization. theyeti |
07-24-2003, 05:50 PM | #48 | |
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Re: Re: Re: Hmmmm....
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07-24-2003, 08:03 PM | #49 | |
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Re: Chew on this one...
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You want an example of something even more impossible? Right. Over the past few billion years the majority of organisms died before being able to reproduce themselves. Let's say, to be generous that half of them did. Now most of those organisms were fairly short-lived but, to be generous, let's say that one generation was twenty years. That means there have been 10^8 generations over the last couple of billion years. The probability all my ancestors survived long enough to reproduce is two to that power, or roughly 10^30000000. That's a hell of a lot bigger than 10^50, so is totally impossible. But it happened. And if you think that's impossible, what do you think of the coincidence that the same thing is true of my daughters . Both of them. My wife, who is very interested in genealogy, is pretty sure it's true in her family as well. So by your reasoning neither I nor my family exist. We are impossible. (OTOH, it might explain why I sometimes find it difficult to get served in bars.) |
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07-24-2003, 08:52 PM | #50 |
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More Fun with [s]Lies[/s] Statistics!!!
Since, say, only one out of a million of sperm fertilizes an egg . . . extend the chance of the one sperm that made each individual to the one sperm that created each parent--not to mention the change of each particular egg--and run it back through out history to realize it is STATISTICALLY IMPOSSIBLE for any of us to be here. "Move along . . . nothing to see here." --J.D. |
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