Sandy,
1) I still don't see how molecular self-assembly "invariably" leads to crystalline forms, and what the strong interactions in a simple salt like NaCl have to do with protein folding.
Think about it in terms of me giving you two buckets of compounds. Call compound one 'A' and compound two 'B'. Let us further suppose that these two compounds have a chemical affinity for one another. Now we dump them into a bug tub together. What will happen? They will begin to bond, but they will not bond in irregular patterns because B does not bond to B and A does not bond to A so I'll always get patterns of ABABABABABABAB and so on. You'll have to forgive me for making it a one-dimensional pattern. In real life it would be three-dimensional. But I think you get the picture. That is self assembly and as Dr. Meyer shows, self-assembly always creates patterns. You never get irregularities. Also, self-assembly would require no DNA as the chemicals would assemble themselves without it. This is how crystals form but I would ask you to look at the protein you posted and ask yourself if it makes sense to think that chemical affinities create that kind of an irregular makeup. Self-assembly always creates regular patterns.
Proteins can not be explained that way. The very need for DNA and RNA shows that proteins are not the result of self-assembly.
Furthermore, to create a molecular machine like the flagellum you would need to take several proteins and assemble them. Again though self-assembly always creates regular patterns whereas the molecular machines do not.
Salt crystals are an excellent example of something that does self assemble. What do they have to do with proteins or molecular machines? Nothing - but they do serve as a great contrast when someone tries to argue that self-assembly created something self-assembly can not account for.
Self-assembly did NOT create the flagellum. The truth is that naturalists have no clue how flagellum are created. They can observe the assembly within the cell but they don't really have an explanation for how it works. You can see the real argument when they say things like:
What is your problem with this statement? We have a detailed account of how the flagellum forms. The proteins do self assemble when they are present together. Do you disagree? If you do then how does the flagellum assemble?
My goodness, so what is it thats doing the assembly?
Compare your diagram of a protein to any real-world example of self assembly and then ask yourself if intelligent design doesn't sound like a more practical explanation.
Don't take my word for it. Don't take BeGood's word for it either. Do the research and make your own conclusions. All I would ask is that you do so with an open mind. On that kind of playing field, ID wins.
2) But more importantly, are you contending that proteins cannot fold by themselves? I can't see any other possible interpretation of the following from Strobel.
The ribosome does help the folding process, but with or without ribosomes if you assemble amino-acids into a sequence they will fold. But here is the thing - if you assemble them into a different sequence they will fold differently. Each protein has a
unique sequence of amino acids stored in the DNA and carried to the ribosome in RNA.
The critical thing is that you can take the same amino acids but use a different sequence from the DNA and you'll get a different protein. No self-assembly there!
Neo-darwinists will argue that it is self-assembly at the cellular level because the cell does do the assembly, but really that's nothing more than symantecs because they have no explanation for why the differnet pieces do what they do. They make observances and they say well, it works because the ribosome does this and the RNA unwinds the helix and takes a sequence, and so on and so on and so on. But why do these things occur? Where are the chemical affinities that tell the RNA which sequence to pick up? Neo-darwinism has no explination for that unless you accept mere observance as an explanation. The question of 'why' it happens leads to ID. In fact, that is exactly why Dr. Michael Behe says he became a proponent of ID.
BeGood,
I am talking about self assembly after a protein has formed. We already agreed the process of transcription and translation must be in place first. The self assembly occurs once the protein is free in the cell.
Please see my comment above on how this is a symantec argument rather than a practical explanation.
Given this however the mechanisms are self sustained would you not agree?
That's kind of like saying that if we take the mechanics and pit crews and fuel and driver and everything else as givens then a NASCAR car maintains itself and drives itself around the track.
I think perhaps we should put the entrie process into numbered steps so you don't take a statement and apply it to the incorrect steps.
Lets use the following.
Step 1. Transcription DNA to RNA
Step 2. Translation RNA to amino acid
Step 3. Folding
Step 4. Protein Interactions.
Step 5. Mutation
Now self assembly occurs at step 4. Not 1, 2, or 3.
Actually, the folding would occur by itself though the ribosome helps with that process. No self-assembly occurs in step 4, and I would ask that you be very careful in what you infer from step five unless you want to start hearing 'BAM! There's a crocodile!' again.
Well lets look at the entire process. Once your confusion lifts it's easy to see that a change in the DNA(step5) will lead to a change in behaviour of the protein interactions(step 4)
I'm not confused BeGood and calling me confused does not support your argument. All it does is show that you don't have a better argument to make.
No the point is that self assemble does not necessarily lead to repetition.
Source, please?
Again the first post is the mechanism of assembly. Self assembly is a given. Proteins are chemicals and will react and interact when conditions will allow for it. This is due to the 2nd law of thermodynamics and the various charges within a protein. Proteins spontaneously interact just like when you pour salt into water and the salt disolves.
http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/genobc/Chapter_19
You just refuted yourself again. The first source shows the mechanism of assembly as being something other than self-assembly. At no point in the first source does anything resembling self-assembly occur. You are mis-applying the second law of thermodynamics.
As for the link you provided going to ull.chemistry.uakron.edu, I actually had to load it four times before I got the joke. I'll post the whole page here:
Proteins
That's it. One word and some links on the left. What were you trying to get out of that? Did the
word self-assemble?
I'm not arguing against God. You simply asked if there is a mechanism which could have originated the bacterial flagellum.
You know what is funny? You keep saying that you aren't arguing against God and yet I've never seen you post anything anywhere on this entire forum where you took a pro-God stance. You are always taking the other side.
If you can find a mechanism that could have originated the bacterial flagellum I'd love to hear it. Thus far all I've seen is conjecture that has already been refuted by scientists such as Dr. Michael Behe and Dr. Stephen Meyer.