Putting the 'probability argument' against abiogenesis in the grave once and for all

by bohm 51 Replies latest jw friends

  • bohm
    bohm

    Amongst the many arguments for and against creation the probability arguments stands out. It goes something like this:

    “the improbability of generating the necessary proteins by chance—or the genetic information to produce them—to balloon beyond comprehension. ... The odds of getting even one functional protein of modest length (150 amino acids) by chance from a prebioitc soup is no better than 1 chance in 10164.” Meyer continues, “Another way to say that is the probability of finding a functional protein by chance alone is a trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion times smaller than the odds of finding a single specific particle among all the particles in the universe.”

    The evidence for the probability of origin of life arising from Darwin’s “warm little pond” seems to have vanished beyond the realm of any possibility—regardless of any early Earth scenario.

    I really, really want to put it in the grave because i think its an embaressment to the theists and thinking humans in general; Its right up there with 'noahs ark has been found' and 'humans have less chromosomes than monkeys', but for some reason people dont see through it.

    One of the reasons i hate it so much is that the people who quote it does not have any idea what the statement they make really say. The key is the use of the word 'chance', 'assembled at random', etc. – notice that this is included by all the scientists who actually calculate the probabilities, but omitted by all creationist.
    Thats for a reason: the probability is strictly true, but it only cover one very limited model for how proteines are assembled (at random), and does not consider other paths; essentially it leave out the fact that the world is governed by physical laws.

    This point may seem technical, and i am quite sure that a lot think that it does not matter much, if the propability is 10^-3000 there is a rather large room for error. The thing is that it is not a trivial point and it invalidate the entire calculation before the question has been resolved. I will demonstrate that by a simple example:

    Yesterday i heard a noise from the kitchen. I ran out and saw a large number of rice on the floor, and my girlfriend was standing with a half-empty bag of rice. There are two options: Either she spilled the rice, ie it landed on the floor 'on random', or she carefully designed the configuration of the rice. Lets try to use creationist math to determine if there is 'intelligent' (mischiveous) design involved:

    The first thing we have to do is to ignore physical laws, causal history and all that junk (thats what we do with proteines, remember?) so in this case we ignore gravity. Then, just as with proteines, we have to specify our 'configuration space'. When we have ignored gravity, the rice can be anywhere in the room (litterally!).
    A grain of rice is at most 3 mm high. The room is 3 m. high. That mean that a grain of rice can be placed (vertically) in about 3m / 3mm = 1000 = 10^3 places. Lets say there is 100 grains of rice on the floor, then the probability to see all 100 lying on the floor is 10^-300. Want lower probability? just add rice or (the horror!) she may have dropped the rice outdoors..

    Holy fucking shit batman! 10^-300'th must rule out the 'random' hypothesis, surely my girlfriend must have painstakingly placed the grains of rice on the floor one by one, surely i must scold her for calling it an accident and blaming 'random'!

    But i am wrong. The real probabillity, when you do not ignore physical laws and causal history is 1, because rice automatically fall to the floor because of gravity. Thats why we cant ignore stuff like gravity, thats why nature has to enter into our equations unless there are extremely good arguments why it can be left out.

    My example might sound artificial, but how about two beaches where on one the rocks are small and on the other the rocks are very large? ripples in the sand? Cloud formation? The earths magnetic field? Neutron stars? All of these are examples that the naive 'lets ignore physics'-calculations will tell us must be explicitly designed and they are wrong. Nature trivially do this because of some mechanisms that are hard to pin-point a-priori and have to enter into the calculation.

    Thats why the 'probability' arguments are so extremely stupid. The person is REALLY arguing that, as in the case of rice, you can just ignore physics, that the system does not exhibit criticallity or complex behaviour and behave more like a cloud of gas at high temperature. They are making that statement without even knowing what enviroment we are discussing, what temperatures the system is at, or what it contain; its just a bunch of unfounded assumptions that the person dont even KNOW they should test or argue for.

    ps.

    Dont try to debunk this post by posting some stuff from an article by a scientist you have not read which just restate the propabilities. My objection is that either the calculation should take into account physical laws, or strong arguments should be made why they can safely be left out. READ the damn thing, THEN answer those points. If you want to convince me that these objections does not matter, make sure the same argument does not give you a probability of 10^-300 in the 'rice'-example.

    pps.

    Bonus question: Explain why the configuration of rice on the floor does not exhibit 'complex specified information' or whatever Dembski call his drivel these days.

  • behemot
    behemot

    ... interesting stuff ... makes sense ... by the way, the correct spelling is "probability"

    Behemot

  • bohm
    bohm

    behemot: man, i will never learn to spell that word :-). Thanks.

  • behemot
    behemot
    behemot: man, i will never learn to spell that word :-). Thanks.

    bohm: I'm sure you will ... probably ;-) Behe

  • aniron
    aniron

    Explain then, how inanimate elements became a thinking being.

  • behemot
  • HintOfLime
    HintOfLime
    Explain then, how inanimate elements became a thinking being.

    One tiny chemical step at a time.... over approximately 3.8 billion years.

    - Lime

  • Psychotic Parrot
    Psychotic Parrot

    Explain then, how inanimate elements became a thinking being.

    You & i were both inanimate elements at one time, just a few short years ago in fact. But then we were eaten by our parents, & the chemicals that we were, were absorbed & fashioned into sex cells. One for daddy & one for mummy. Through an act of sin, these 2 cells met, combined, & divided. Over a period of time, approximately 6-9 months, these non-sentient cells divided so much that they eventually formed a thinking being. Me in my case, & you in your case.

    Inanimate elements (& compounds) become thinking beings all the time, & it only takes a few short months. Now imagine that process happening on a generational level, over a period of billions of years, with competition as a driving force, & you have your answer

  • bohm
    bohm

    aniron: No i cant explain that. I cant exlpain AIDS, cancer, scizophrenia, the distribution of primes in the natural numbers or a number of things either - NOONE CAN FULLY AT THE MOMENT! Do you really want to take that as positive evidence that the AIDS-dwarfs, cancer-elf, scizophrenia-ferry and prime-distribution-spirit is the most reasonable cause for these things?

    If you do, its really interesting. Start a thread about it or better yet, tell it to a medical professional. This thread is about a PARTICULAR ARGUMENT against abiogenesis which i have demonstrated is wrong. If abiogenesis took place or if evolution can produce intelligence is a completely seperate topic.

  • cognizant dissident
    cognizant dissident

    Aniron: In exactly the same way as you think God became a thinking being!

    Bohm: Interesting argument and quite logical. When the numbers become astronomical, people's minds tend not to be able to comprehend them and they just dismiss them as impossible.

    It reminds me of some of the arguments in the "Creation" book, such as the one about the astronomical odds of the 17 parts of a meat grinder being shaken around and becoming assembled. We do have many assembled, working meat grinders on this planet, and we know that certain forces of placement were necessary to put them in position and maintain them (human hands using the laws of physics). The egocentric error in logic that creationists derive from this simple truth, is that the laws of physics cannot exert forces upon other substances in this universe without the manipulation of human intelligence or the manipulation of a human like God man has created in his own image.

    Another similar line of reasoning by JW's is the astronomical odds of all the right conditions for the existence of organic life occurring on this planet. (being just the right distance from the sun, the right temperature, oxygen, water, etc?) Since none of the other planets we know of have these conditions, that proves it must have been designed, right? Wrong!

    The odds may be in the trillions, but in fact there are trillions of planets. This planet does not exist because God created it for us with the the perfect conditions for organic life to thrive on. Organic life exists, we exist, because this planet happens to be the one in a trillionth planet that is positioned by the forces of physics, where organic life can survive and thrive. If it should be displaced by those same forces sometimes in the future, then we can kiss our arses goodbye, but I'm sure the theists will all claim God is angry and it is Armageddon.

    It is really a simple, but very common, flaw of logic, which confuses cause and effect and is due to the very egocentric view of humans that they are central to the universe and a greater plan "out there". Humans have trouble coping with the seemingly random nature of birth, life and death and a universe and God that doesn't seem to care about us. This causes them to invent many explanations to account for the supposed randomness. However, as you pointed out, what seems to be random is really not, it is the laws of physics at work, and just because humans as of yet do not always understand those physical causes, does not mean God did it!

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