1over137 wrote:BGoodForGoodSake wrote:1over137 wrote:BGoodForGoodSake wrote:Who says DNA appeared randomly?
So, then, it was created by God?
I think my question is straight forward.
Who is claiming that DNA appeared randomly?
Oh, Sorry. I've just found the pdf on the web by SC Meyer:
DNA and the Origin of Life. The answer to your question may be found on page 14 and the following pages. More on that later.
So, some quotes from that pdf.
"... origin of life researchers have proposed three broad types of naturalistic explanation to explain the origin of specified genetic information: those emphasizing chance, necessity, or the combination of the two." (p.14)
"In 1954 the physicist George Wald, for example, argued for the causal efficacy of chance in conjunction vast expanses of time. As he explained, "Time is in fact hero of the plot. ... Given so much time, the impossible becomes possible, the possible probable, and the probable virtually certain. Later in 1968 Francis Crick would suggest that the origin of the genetic code ... might be a 'frozen accident'." (p.14)
"While outside origin-of-life biology some may still invoke 'chance' as an explanation for the origin of life, most serious origin-of-life researchers now reject it as an adequate causal explanation for the origin of biological information. ... many calculations have been made to determine the probability of formulating functional proteins and nucleic acids at random. ... these calculations often assumed extremely favorable prebiotic conditions, much more time than was actually available on the early earth, and theoretically maximal reaction rates among constituent monomers. Such calculations have invariably shown that the probability of obtaining functionally sequenced biomacromolecules at random is, in Prirogine's words, 'vanishingly small ... even on the scale of ... billions of years'." (p.14-15)
Now something about self-organizational scenarios.
"... most origin-of-life theorists after 1960 attempted to address the problem of the origin of biological information in a completely different way. Researchers began to look for self-organizational laws and properties of chemical attraction that might explain the origin of the specified information in DNA and proteins. Rather than invoking chance, these theories invoked necessity. ... At that time, several researchers began to propose that deterministic forcers (stereochemical necessity) made the origin of life not just probable, but inevitable. ..." (p.21)
... to be continued ... in case of questions.
But examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good.
-- 1 Thessalonians 5:21
For I am confident of this very thing, that He who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus.
-- Philippians 1:6
#foreverinmyheart