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Evolution Is Biologically Impossible
www.irc.org ^ | Joseph Mastropaolo, Ph.D

Posted on 06/24/2002 2:56:50 PM PDT by Texaggie79

IMPACT No. 317


Evolution Is Biologically Impossible

by Joseph Mastropaolo, Ph.D.*

Institute for Creation Research, PO Box 2667, El Cajon, CA 92021
Voice: (619) 448-0900 Fax: (619) 448-3469

"Vital Articles on Science/Creation" November 1999
Copyright © 1999 All Rights Reserved.


Charles Darwin was daydreaming when he wrote that he could visualize "in some warm little pond," with all sorts of salts and electricity, the spontaneous generation of the first living cell.1 Darwin's dream of the magical powers of salts and electricity may have come from his grandfather. Mary Shelley wrote of him in 1831 in her introduction to Frankenstein. "They talked of the experiments of Dr. Darwin . . . who preserved a piece of vermicelli in a glass case, till by some extraordinary means it began to move with voluntary motion." She goes on to speculate that galvanism (electricity) was the extraordinary means.2All theories need testing, so I bought some vermicelli pasta, kept it in salt water in a test tube for a month, and never saw any motion, voluntary or otherwise. I also used a tesla coil to conduct "galvanism" through it to a fluorescent bulb. The bulb lit and the vermicelli eventually began to cook, but never came to life.

"Darwin's bulldog," Thomas Huxley, had a vision of himself on the early earth as "a witness of the evolution of living protoplasm from non-living matter."3 In Huxley's day, the cell was blissfully considered simply a blob of protoplasm. Huxley also may have read Mary Shelley's subtitle to Frankenstein, "The Modern Prometheus."2 Prometheus was the Greek mythical Titan, who formed a man of clay, then animated it. This myth may be the earliest reference to abiogenesis, the animation of inorganic materials. In order not to leave that possibility untried, I fashioned a clay man and directed the tesla-coil spark over it to light the bulb. The clay man was not animated.

Evolutionists currently invoke the "primeval soup" to expand the "warm little pond" into a larger venue, the oceans. They aim to spontaneously generate the first cell so they must thicken the salt water with (take a breath) polysaccharides, lipids, amino acids, alpha helixes, polypeptide chains, assembled quaternary protein subunits, and nucleotides, all poised to self-combine into functional cellular structures, energy systems, long-chain proteins and nucleic acids.4Then during an electrical storm, just the right mix of DNA, mRNA, ribosomes, cell membranes and enzymes are envisioned in the right place at the right time and the first cell is thunderbolted together and springs to life.5 That marvelous first cell, the story goes, filled the oceans with progeny competing in incredible polysaccharide, lipid, amino acid, nucleotide, and cannibalistic feasts. The predators thereby thinned the soup to the watery oceans we have today while the prey escaped by mystically transmuting themselves into the current complex animals and plants, or perhaps vice versa because no one was there to record it. We are assured by the disciples of Darwin and Huxley that the "once upon a pond" story to obtain a blob of protoplasm is still sufficient for the spontaneous generation of the cell as we know it today. All demur when asked for evidence. All balk when asked to reverse-engineer a cell in the laboratory in spite of the fact that laboratories rival nature and reverse engineering is orders of magnitude easier than engineering an original design. One wonders why they balk if cell stuff is so easily self-generated and carbon molecules seem to have such an innate tendency to self-combine.

To test simply the alleged self-combining tendency of carbon, I placed one microliter of India (lampblack) ink in 27 ml. of distilled water. The ink streaked for the bottom of the test tube where it formed a dark haze which completely diffused to an even shade of gray in 14 hours. The carbon stayed diffused, not aggregated as when dropped on paper. At this simple level, there is no evidence that the "primeval soup" is anything but fanciful imagination.

In science, the burden of evidence is on the proposer of the theory. So although the evolutionists have the burden of providing evidence for their fanciful tales, they take no responsibility for a detailed account or for any evidence demonstrating feasibility. Contrarily, they go so far as to imply that anyone holding them to the normal requirements of science is feebleminded, deranged, or evil. For example, Professor Richard Dawkins has been quoted as saying, "It is absolutely safe to say that, if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in evolution, that person is ignorant, stupid, or insane (or wicked, but I'd rather not consider that)."6 Instead of taking proper responsibility for the burden of evidence, the evolutionist propagandizes by the intimidation of name calling.

To set a better example, let us take up the evolutionist's burden of evidence to see where it leads. Our first observation is that apparently all functions in a living organism are based largely upon the structures of its proteins. The trail of the first cell therefore leads us to the microbiological geometry of amino acids and a search for the probability of creating a protein by mindless chance as specified by evolution. Hubert Yockey published a monograph on the microbiology, information theory, and mathematics necessary to accomplish that feat. Accordingly, the probability of evolving one molecule of iso-1-cytochrome c, a small protein common in plants and animals, is an astounding one chance in 2.3 times ten billion vigintillion. The magnitude of this impossibility may be appreciated by realizing that ten billion vigintillion is one followed by 75 zeros. Or to put it in evolutionary terms, if a random mutation is provided every second from the alleged birth of the universe, then to date that protein molecule would be only 43% of the way to completion. Yockey concluded, "The origin of life by chance in a primeval soup is impossible in probability in the same way that a perpetual motion machine is impossible in probability."7

Richard Dawkins implicitly agreed with Yockey by stating, "Suppose we want to suggest, for instance, that life began when both DNA and its protein-based replication machinery spontaneously chanced to come into existence. We can allow ourselves the luxury of such an extravagant theory, provided that the odds against this coincidence occurring on a planet do not exceed 100 billion billion to one."8The 100 billion billion is 1020. So Dawkins' own criterion for impossible in probability, one chance in more than 1020, has been exceeded by 50 orders of magnitude for only one molecule of one small protein. Now that Professor Dawkins has joined the ranks of non-believers in evolution, politesse forbids inquiring whether he considers himself "ignorant, stupid, insane, or wicked."

Let us proceed to criteria more stringent. For example, Borel stated that phenomena with very small probabilities do not occur. He settled arbitrarily on the probability of one chance in 1050 as that small probability. Again according to this more stringent criterion, we see that evolving one molecule of one protein would not occur by a wide margin, this time 25 orders of magnitude.9

Let us go further. According to Dembski, Borel did not adequately distinguish those highly improbable events properly attributed to chance from those properly attributed to something else and Borel did not clarify what concrete numerical values correspond to small probabilities. So Dembski repaired those deficiencies and formulated a criterion so stringent that it jolts the mind. He estimated 1080 elementary particles in the universe and asked how many times per second an event could occur. He found 1045. He then calculated the number of seconds from the beginning of the universe to the present and for good measure multiplied by one billion for 1025 seconds in all. He thereby obtained 1080 x 1045 x 1025 = 10150 for his Law of Small Probability.9

I have not been able to find a criterion more stringent than Dembski's one chance in 10150. Anything as rare as that probability had absolutely no possibility of happening by chance at any time by any conceivable specifying agent by any conceivable process throughout all of cosmic history. And if the specified event is not a regularity, as the origin of life is not, and if it is not chance, as Dembski's criterion and Yockey's probability may prove it is not, then it must have happened by design, the only remaining possibility.

Now to return to the probability of evolving one molecule of one protein as one chance in 1075, we see that it does not satisfy Dembski's criterion of one chance in 10150. The simultaneous availability of two molecules of one protein may satisfy the criterion, but they would be far from the necessary complement to create a living cell. For a minimal cell, 60,000 proteins of 100 different configurations would be needed.5,10 If these raw materials could be evolved at the same time, and if they were not more complex on average to evolve than the iso-1-cytochrome c molecule, and if these proteins were stacked at the cell's construction site, then we may make a gross underestimation of what the chances would be to evolve that first cell. That probability is one chance in more than 104,478,296, a number that numbs the mind because it has 4,478,296 zeros. If we consider one chance in 10150 as the standard for impossible, then the evolution of the first cell is more than 104,478,146 times more impossible in probability than that standard.

Reproduction may be called a regularity because billions of people have witnessed billions of new individuals arising that way, and in no other way, for thousands of years. The origin of life was a unique event and certainly not a regularity. Therefore, according to mathematical logicians, the only possibilities left are that life either was generated by chance or by deliberate design. The standard for impossible events eliminated evolution so the only remaining possibility is that life was designed into existence. The probability of the correctness of this conclusion is the inverse of the probability that eliminated evolution, that is, 104,478,296 chances to one.

Although the certainty of design has been demonstrated beyond doubt, science cannot identify the designer. Given a designer with the intelligence to construct a cell and all life forms, it is not logical that he would construct only one cell and leave the rest to chance. The only logical possibility is that the designer would design and build the entire structure, the entire biosphere, to specified perfection. That seems to be as far as science can go.

Life was designed. It did not evolve. The certainty of these conclusions is 104,478,296 (1 followed by 4,478,296 zeros) to one. This evidence suggests a Designer who designed and built the entire biosphere and, for it to function, the entire universe. Primary and secondary sources from history properly provide additional information on the Designer because the biological sciences are not equal to that task.

References

1 Darwin, F., ed (1888) The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, London: John Murray, vol. 3, p. 18.
2 Shelley, Mary W. (1831) Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus, London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, Introduction, p. 9.
3 Huxley, Thomas H. (1870) "Biogenesis and Abiogenesis" in (1968) Collected Essays of Thomas H. Huxley, vol. 8, Discourses Biological and Gelogical, New York: Greenwood Press, p. 256.
4 Behe, Michael J. (1996) Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution, New York: Touchstone, pp. 262-268.
5 Denton, Michael (1986) Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, Bethesda, Maryland: Adler & Adler, p. 263.
6 Johnson, Phillip E. (1993) Darwin On Trial, Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, p. 9.
7 Yockey, Hubert P. (1992) Information Theory and Molecular Biology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 255, 257.
8 Dawkins, Richard (1996) The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design, New York: W.W. Norton & Co., p. 146.
9 Dembski, William A. (1998) The Design Inference: Eliminating Chance Through Small Probabilities, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 5,209,210.
10 Morowitz, H. J. (1966) "The Minimum Size of Cells" in Principles of Biomolecular Organization, eds. G.E.W. Wostenholme and M. O'Connor, London: J.A. Churchill, pp. 446-459.

* Dr. Mastropaolo is an adjunct professor of physiology for the ICR Graduate School.

This "Impact" was converted to HTML, for Web use, from the original formatted desktop article. Comments regarding typographical errors in the above material are appreciated. Corrections can be faxed or emailed to Webmaster, fax: (619) 448-3469.

All ICR staff members adhere to a Statement of Faith in the form of two documents: "Tenets of Scientific Creationism," and "Tenets of Biblical Creationism." (see Impact No. 85)

As a missionary organization, ICR is funded by God's people. The majority of its income is provided by individual donors who desire to proclaim God's truth about origins. Gifts can be designated for research, the graduate school, seminars, or any special part of the ICR ministry. All others will be used where most needed. We pledge to use them wisely and with integrity.

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We believe God has raised up ICR to spearhead Biblical Christianity's defense against the godless dogma of evolutionary humanism. Only by showing the scientific bankruptcy of evolution, while exalting Christ and the Bible, will Christians be successful in "the pulling down of strongholds; casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ" (II Corinthians 10:4,5).

Member, Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability



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To: Junior
These debates always suck. I'm gonna go argue with my 4 year old. It's about the same.
121 posted on 06/24/2002 4:37:53 PM PDT by The Mike Device
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To: _Jim
I think they are in deep denial - they find themselves using the very tools that science wrought (computers and microprocesors and the TONS of science that got us to this *place* here on FR) -

What does believing in the positives of science have to do with whether or not someone is a creationist? Has either disproved the other? To me they are absolutely complimentary.

To me, the universe is our erector set, compliments of God. And to make it doubly fun, the only instruction sheet he gave us was the Bible, which gives us the why. He left it up to us to take apart the clock and figure out how it works. So far, we've done pretty well.

122 posted on 06/24/2002 4:41:41 PM PDT by RobRoy
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To: Texaggie79
Texaggie79:

There is proof of footprints of man just as old as dinosaur prints though.




Wow! I'd sure like to see those prints, & the proof. - Got a link?
123 posted on 06/24/2002 4:42:17 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: The Mike Device
We're going to have a debate over the existance of monsters. She says the burden of proof is on me as the proposer of the theory that they don't exist. She says monsters exist outside this physical plane and as such are not subject to the laws of physics. Take care all.
124 posted on 06/24/2002 4:43:07 PM PDT by The Mike Device
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To: Texaggie79
Moronic
125 posted on 06/24/2002 4:44:05 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: Bandolier
f nothing can exist without efficient cause, God cannot exist without efficient cause; who created him?

So now I can meditate on that while contemplating my navel at the same time.

But I'll have to spit out my gum. Two things at a time is about it. I don't want to choke to death...

126 posted on 06/24/2002 4:45:13 PM PDT by RobRoy
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To: Raymond Hendrix
God is comforting the souls lost in this crash at this very moment and, I'm sure, ministering to their friends and family

Are you saying the bible does not state that the clean and unclean entered the ark two x two? Which bible are you reading?

127 posted on 06/24/2002 4:50:25 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: RobRoy
So now I can meditate on that while contemplating my navel at the same time.

Your navel would probably outsmart you; don't do it.

128 posted on 06/24/2002 4:51:18 PM PDT by Bandolier
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To: Physicist
Thank you for your thoughtful and learned explanation to my questions.

Problem I have with it is, even the simplest "light sensitivity" is still mind-bogglingly complex. You need the sight organ, a brain complex enough to derive some good from the data, and wiring capable of relaying that data in a meaningful way to the right area of the brain.

If eyes "evolved" from simple to complex, then did the wiring evolve at the same exact rate as the sight organ? What would impel an organism to design wiring that was beyond it's use? What would impel an organism to create an eye design that was more sophisticated than the wiring could handle?

How would the organism know that it needed more sophisticated wiring, if the data coming back from the more "evolved" eye was undiscernable to the brain because the simpler wiring couldn't even transmit the more robust data?

129 posted on 06/24/2002 4:52:21 PM PDT by berned
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To: tpaine
http://www.worldbydesign.org/f ootprint.htm
130 posted on 06/24/2002 4:54:57 PM PDT by Texaggie79
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Comment #131 Removed by Moderator

To: RightFighter
Not to mention that no man would ever write a book that condemns himself to hell.
132 posted on 06/24/2002 5:04:38 PM PDT by GiovannaNicoletta
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To: Bandolier
Canned Palestinians.

Good answer, but it's a little known fact that canned palestinians only have a shelf life of two years - and that's with modern canning methods. Who knows how well they kept back then. What if they weren't heated long enough.

On the other hand, they would have been purchased from supermarkets in Egypt, and we know how long King Tut lasted (some parts are edible...). Wasn't there even a well preserved babe that Clinton had the hots for?

133 posted on 06/24/2002 5:08:20 PM PDT by RobRoy
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To: berned
Problem I have with it is, even the simplest "light sensitivity" is still mind-bogglingly complex. You need the sight organ, a brain complex enough to derive some good from the data, and wiring capable of relaying that data in a meaningful way to the right area of the brain.

Nice dodge, but you asked about eyes. The brain and nerves were there before the eyes. Can't you think of a use for a brain other than eyesight? On second thought, don't answer that. :-)

If eyes "evolved" from simple to complex, then did the wiring evolve at the same exact rate as the sight organ? What would impel an organism to design wiring that was beyond it's use?

The eyeless creature would still need to feel its way around. A high-bandwidth channel would come ready-made.

What would impel an organism to create an eye design that was more sophisticated than the wiring could handle?

Nothing is needed for the crudest eye that existing sensory nerves couldn't easily handle.

How would the organism know that it needed more sophisticated wiring, if the data coming back from the more "evolved" eye was undiscernable to the brain because the simpler wiring couldn't even transmit the more robust data?

They would evolve in concert after a certain point. Perhaps they'd take turns being the bottleneck. What limits human eyesight now, the eye or the optic nerve? My guess is the eye, but who can tell what the situation was 1 million years ago?

134 posted on 06/24/2002 5:11:56 PM PDT by Physicist
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To: Bandolier
Your navel would probably outsmart you; don't do it.

Actually, we have an ongoing competition. So far I have a slight edge, but I've learned to avoid competition if my blood sugar is low - I got killed the last time.

135 posted on 06/24/2002 5:14:05 PM PDT by RobRoy
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To: Texaggie79
I would like someone to explain to me how death evolved. Every living thing dies. Wouldn't evolutionary pressure select for an organism that could lengthen its life? Instead, every thing dies.
136 posted on 06/24/2002 5:14:07 PM PDT by ladyrustic
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To: Texaggie79
There is no doubt about the fact that some people started life in a stagnent pond, so how does that prove evolution?
137 posted on 06/24/2002 5:14:41 PM PDT by exnavy
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To: berned
Problem I have with it is, even the simplest "light sensitivity" is still mind-bogglingly complex.

Even plants have light sensitivity.

No brain required... :)

138 posted on 06/24/2002 5:16:20 PM PDT by forsnax5
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To: Texaggie79
Hmmmm, -- Interesting proof tex.


Say, did I tell you about my new sure fire investment newsletter? - Yep, for a mere $49.95, billable weekly, you can get up to $20,000.00 in extra income! Every Month!
-- Freepmail me aggie, for this once in a lifetime opportunity! And, --- tell ALL your friends here!
This is an FR Creationist Special!
139 posted on 06/24/2002 5:17:19 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: Orual
"I'll have a venomtini, please, milked not shaken. Easy on the tini."

Make mine straight tini with venom on the side.
140 posted on 06/24/2002 5:17:19 PM PDT by aculeus
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