DailyDirt: More Clues To The Origins Of Life On Earth
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
The beginnings of life on our planet aren't well known because we simply don't know the exact conditions that were present billions of years ago. However, experiments under lab conditions that try to simulate the early solar system could shed some light on how early life developed, and there are some researchers looking into prebiotic chemical reactions to see if we can narrow down the possibilities and rule out any pathways that are unlikely to have contributed to our present thriving ecosystem. These experiments could lead to a better understanding of what life is and how we might detect other kinds of life elsewhere in our solar system or galaxy.- Some chemists demonstrate that many important prebiotic molecules can be created with just hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen cyanide and ultraviolet light. This finding could help end the debate over whether early life began with cell membranes or RNA or DNA -- or create more questions as it looks like the precursors to RNA, lipids and amino acids could have all been made at the same time under similar conditions which might have been common in prebiotic earth. [url]
- Professor Jack Szostak talks about the origins of life on earth and how lab experiments could help us understand astrobiology. Szostak discusses how early life on our planet might have started with simpler biomolecules than we have today and became more complex with natural selection -- but there are still a lot of unanswered questions. [url]
- Meteorites bombarded by radiation could have seeded prebiotic molecules on planets throughout the universe. Zapping formamide under conditions thought to be similar to early solar systems resulted in organic molecules such as nucleobases, carboxylic acids, sugars, amino acids, and some precursors to RNA and DNA. [url]
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Filed Under: astrobiology, biology, biomolecules, dna, jack szostak, life, meteorites, prebiotic molecules, rna, seti
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Re: Self replicating protein structures
Go figure.
If we can't replicate in the lab or can't observe it in the field then we aren't going to know how it happened. But we will have the standard fall-back - belief.
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Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
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Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
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Re: but you believe
At this point, you can hear the audible snap as the religionists’ brains shut down. You see, the difference between Science and Religion is that Science is not afraid to confront the awkward questions that Religion would rather not think about.
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Re: Re: but you believe
The basic assumption you are trying to argue from is that you are able to understand all things. If a simple understanding (with no dichotomies) of an electron can't be achieved then how can you even think you understand the infinite. Try to comprehend 1,000,000 grains of sand and if you say you understand fully this number of grains then we all will know that you are deluded and foolish.
For someone who espouses that science confronts the awkward questions, you forget that "science" has very little understanding of the world about us. It can't even face the question about good and evil (which is not a question for science anyway).
Science (or should we be more accurate and say the scientific method) is one tool in our arsenal to try and understand the world about us.
It puzzles me that specific groups of people have made science their religion above anything else and that they cannot see just how foolish and close-minded they actually are.
Science today is so full of dogma that any competing theories/models/hypotheses are treated as though they are heretical. I pity today's young people because they have not been taught the scientific method and the limits therein.
When you come to the point that you actually don't have a clue, then you are at the start of maybe getting one.
I have seen your (as in Lawrence D’Oliveiro) particular arguments before and you are so circular that I still don't know why I am even bothering to respond to your lack of insight.
To finish, try expanding your reading and you'll discover that many people have looked at your question head-on and have delivered well reasoned discussions about this and the limits of our understanding.
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Re: The basic assumption you are trying to argue from is that you are able to understand all things
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Re: Re: Re: but you believe
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Re: going off on tangents not addressing the point it is trying to refute
But that’s typical of the religionists, isn’t it? All they have to offer, when faced with the Truth, is just vicious, mindless, irrational hatred.
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Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
I have read that some do not consider statistics to be math, not sure how they explain Vegas.
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Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
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Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
As an example, say you had a die with 100 trillion sides to it. Assume you rolled it once every day, and you were trying for a particular, set number. Under those circumstances, the odds of you rolling that set number would be minuscule, even if you rolled it every day for your entire life, because each roll would have it's own 1-in-100 trillion chance of you succeeding.
Now, say that everybody on the planet got to roll that die once a day, all 7 billion plus people, all trying for that same number. Odds still aren't good, but they're drastically better that someone will roll the number, simply due to how many rolls are being made.
Now, in addition to that, change it so that the time period is much, much larger. It's no longer 'will a certain number be rolled this century and a half(assuming the previous time limit was 'the life-span of everyone current rolling), but instead it's now being rolled by every human alive, now and in the future, for however long the human race survives.
Extend that time period for a couple million, and especially a couple of billion years(maybe an E.T. found the magical die and in the interests of xeno-archaeology decided to keep the tradition alive with it's race), and that 1-in 100 trillion chance, which was so incredibly tiny beforehand, becomes all but certain to happen, simply due to how often it's being rolled for, and how many times it's rolled in the course of all those years.
Even tiny, 'all but impossible' odds become almost dead certainties with enough time and space added to the equation, so saying that the odds of those proteins forming that way are 'so low as to be non-existent' doesn't really mean much when you add in those two factors.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
The significance is that there hasn't been enough time in all the universe for even one viable protein to have been randomly generated. The argument then goes to that the universe "must have" a predisposition to creating these proteins and as such the process is not random because ....
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
and this is based upon research and data analysis showing the conclusion to be correct - right?
Rather than whine and moan about how vast and overwhelming everything is, why not sit back and examine with an open mind the work of others?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
Have you never sat down and looked at what is happening in a semiconductor junction or the root system of a tree? Or even just watching the birth of lamb or the hatching of a chicken? Or have you sat and looked at what time is or free will? Or tried to work out why a thermosiphon works or why specific timbers just machine so well and why they are so beautiful? Or why Damascus steel gives such incredible etching patterns when worked into a tool?
And you advise to just sit back and examine the work of others. Man, get out there and do your own research as well. Get fascinated with the universe around you. It will surprise you at every turn. In addition, do this in the company of children, they see things that we don't.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
Like you obviously have? Let's see your work then.
It is apparent that your bewilderment has blurred your perception.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
This is good news because I would like to see it.
I did not suggest one mooch off of others research, I implied that because you were so bamboozled by the immense scope of the universe that you might benefit from reading up on attempts by others to understand the universe.
And how modest you must be, insinuating your research is just as good as that of well known scientists throughout history.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
The documentation I was looking at was basing the age of the universe at about 13 billion years. You know, that is about 10 orders of magnitude greater than our year (which ever version you want to use: solar, sidereal, draconic, julian, lunar, etc).
It appears you don't seem to have any understanding of what an order of magnitude is, but then again maybe you do and/or the numbers are just too small for your brain the size of a planet to appreciate.
Oh dear, have I just infringed on somebody's copyright?
I don't know how old the universe is. I wasn't around when it came into being, though sometimes I wish I had - it would have been spectacular.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the likelihood of random protein formation of the correct types
I wasn't around when they made the pizza they delivered, but that doesn't strengthen the argument that it was forged by goblin wizards inside a volcano. I.e., I really hate that cop-out answer as it conveys a complete disdain for deducing anything about the world.
Also, there is absolutely no reason to assume that caring about the scientific method somehow removes a person's sense of wonder about the vastness and beautiful complexity of the universe. This whole argument has been absurd.
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Re: Re: Self replicating protein structures
No such thing. Either the likelihood is extremely low or it's nonexistent. If the likelihood is extremely low, it still means that if you roll those dice enough times, the unlikely thing will happen.
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Re: Re: Re: Self replicating protein structures
And if the current age of the universe is many, many orders of magnitude too short for the event to have occurred yet?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Self replicating protein structures
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Self replicating protein structures
If it doesn't interest you to look about that's fine. I have simply shared some information that I came across recently in the probability of random protein formation. You can follow up or not, you can challenge it or not. But I'll give you the freedom of doing your own investigation, if you are interested.
But at the moment, I am more interested in developing a method of solar tracking for a thermosiphon than doing any more about this particular subject on this forum tonight.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Self replicating protein structures
Previously you told someone else they should do their own research rather than read what others have done, did you not?
So, tell us of this research where it is postulated a certain amount of time is required in order to form various chemical bonds.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Self replicating protein structures
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Self replicating protein structures
While possible, there's no reason to think that this is the case. The comment that you made and refer to here doesn't provide such a reason.
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