Darwin's Natural Selection

The Origin of Life: Creation or Evolution? >Origin of Life Theories: Creation or Evolution?
> Evolution Theory and Information
> Evolution of Complexity
>Life's origin and Evolution
>Evolution of a Protein
> Primordial Soup Evolution
>Chemistry and Entropy
> The Second Law of Thermodynamics
>DNA, RNA and protein structure
>The Origin of Life
> RNA Self Replication
> Primordial Soup Myth
> Irreducible Complexity
> DNA Evolution
>Prebiotic ATP Energy
>> Natural Selection
> Intelligent Design Theory
>
Was Life Created?
> The RNA World
> Sitemap
> Life's Origin Home Page

RNA Self Replication

In chapter 10, each RNA base added to a random chain was shown to add 6 bits of primoridal information. So the odds of creating an RNA molecule with 50 bases is now 1 in 2 50 x 6 or 1 time in 2 x 1090 tries.

       With 2.1 x 1060 tries, evolution has a 1 in 1030 chance of creating a single RNA molecule with 50 or more bases. This number accounts for the size of the universe. It also accounts for the age of the universe. Given that this RNA molecule is just a random sequence of RNA bases, it is almost inconceivable that it would know how to self-replicate. So the true odds are much more remote - and perhaps more importantly natural selection plays no role until a  molecule knows how to replicate and knows how to use an energy source to drive this replication. Furthermore, the 6 bits is only true if cytosine, ribose, adenine, guanine and uracil are the principle components in all 7 x 1026 soups (see the favorable assumptions made for the soup on page 189). Given the experimental evidence presented in chapter 9 concerning prebiotic synthesis of these chemicals, the idea of a self replicating RNA molecule should be laid to rest. Life did not originate in this way.


Next: Evolution of the First Protein

Previous: How Many Primordial Soups

 

Navigation Menu Chapter 15

Chapter 15: The Effect of Time on Evolution
        How Does Time Factor Into the Equation
        How Fast do the tries accumulate?

        How many stars in the universe?
        How many primordial soups in the universe?
        RNA self replication
        Protein Evolution
        Upper Limit in the Number of Tries

        Constraints on the First Self Replicating Molecule
        Natural selection Limits the Number of Tries
        This Simple Example Shows that Evolution Does not Work Like Darwin Imagined
        Natural Selection Reduces the Number of Tries
        Implications for the self Replicating Molecule

PDF: Natural Selection, Evolution and Time  (264 Kb)

Copyright Intelligent Design Books Raleigh NC 2005-2012
origin_and_evolution_of_life
 

Pictures From the Galapagos-> Stuff Charles Darwin never Saw