Amino Acids are just the building blocks, the letters of the alphabet for 
building complex protein molecules.  You have to chain them correctly in the 
proper sequence to get even the simplest protein of 50 animo acids.  The 
chances of this occuring randomly is staggering in its own right, let alone 
come up with 300-500 of these proteins to come up with the simplest 
self-replicating life.  

Having amino acids is a far cry from the simplest protein and definitely a far 
far far cry to the simplest life form.  It's like saying since we found the 
letters A - Z, the novel "Romeo and Juliet" can be easily found also.

I have read your wikipedia articles, and I am suitably "impressed" by the level 
of its scholarship and integrity.


Jojo


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Colin Hercus 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2012 2:45 PM
  Subject: Re: [Vo]:The Fallacis of Darwinian Evolution - Genetic Improbability


  Hi Jojo,

  I'd hate to say I read it on Wikipedia, but there's also more scientific 
sources than that. I'm not about to go do the research for you, I suggest you 
check it out yourself. Abiogenesis is a problem and scientists are working on 
it. That's a lot of why we looking for life on other planets, other solar 
systems and in extreme environments on earth.  Amino acids have been found in 
comet tails, they're really not that complicated. 

  Colin



  On Tue, Aug 7, 2012 at 2:12 PM, Jojo Jaro <[email protected]> wrote:

    You don't know that.  But even if it was, that still does not solve your 
abiogenesis problem.


      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Colin Hercus 
      To: [email protected] 
      Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2012 1:40 PM
      Subject: Re: [Vo]:The Fallacis of Darwinian Evolution - Genetic 
Improbability





      On Tue, Aug 7, 2012 at 6:51 AM, Jojo Jaro <[email protected]> wrote:

        Abd, I appreciate your comments.

        After reading your post below and rereading it and rereading it several 
times, I am still at a lost on what you are contending.  Please restate your 
contentions in simpler prose that dumb people like me can understand.

        Yes, While we know that amino acids can be created from non-life simple 
hydrocarbons, the conditions do not match known earth atmospheric conditions.  
I believe you are alluding to the Urey-Miller experiment where they 
successfully created amino acids from base molecular H20 and some simple 
hydrocarbons.  But one thing you need to realize, it never created any 
self-replicating molecules, it never create any "life"

        The Urey-Miller experiment was successful but did not simulate the 
correct conditions.  For one, it was performed on a "Reducing" Atmosphere of 
hydrocarbon gases, not the oxidative atmosphere with oxygen.  When the 
experiment was redone with oxygen, the oxidizing action of oxygen destroyed the 
animo acids just as quickly as it was created.  Hence, the experiment was 
designed on top of faulty assumptions.

      No, the earths atmosphere was reducing before we had photo synthesis 


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