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The Origin of Life

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Title: The Origin of Life


1
The Origin of Life
  • Chapter 18

2
Overview of Origins
  • Basic Worldviews
  • Science and Its Limitations
  • 5 Ways of Looking at Science and Faith
  • Operational vs. Origin Science
  • The Origin of Life
  • Life from outer space?
  • Prebiotic Synthesis?

3
Christian Worldview
  • The God of the Bible exists and the Bible is
    Gods revelation to humanity its purpose is to
    teach, rebuke, correct, and train us in righteous
    living so that we may become people of God
    prepared for a life of service- Richard Right
    (Biology Through the Eyes of Faith)

4
Naturalistic Worldview
  • The cosmos is all that is or ever was or ever
    will be- Carl Sagan

5
A Common Worldview Among Scientists
  • Naïve Positivism- science is the only body of
    knowledge that strictly follows empirical
    processes, and therefore supplies the only real
    human knowledge
  • A belief that science holds the key to solving
    all of our problems science is elevated to
    scientism , a religion

6
Worldview and the Cosmos
  • Nature- is governed by natural laws and these
    operate on the basis of cause and effect to bring
    about all that happens in this natural realm.
    It is autonomous- it has independent status
  • Creation- the entire material world and natural
    laws are dependent on Gods Existence

7
3 Limitations of Science
  • The study of the basic philosophies or ideologies
    of scientists is very difficult because they are
    rarely articulated. They largely consist of
    silent assumptions that are taken so completely
    for granted that they are never mentioned- Ernst
    Mayr
  • Presuppositions- the uniformity of nature and the
    orderliness of the world are assumed

8
3 Limitations of Science
  • Proof- Science cannot provide proof of its
    results

9
3 Limitations of Science
  • Domain Limitations- science cannot give ultimate
    explanations for the origin and existence of the
    universe
  • Science cannot comment on beauty, moral values,
    etc.

10
Five Ways of Relating Science and Faith 1
  • Difference in Essence- concerned with two
    distinct and separate realms- the natural and the
    supernatural
  • Science and theology cannot even in principle
    come into conflict
  • 1. Scaling the Secular City A Defense of
    Christianity by J.P. Moreland, Talbot School of
    Theology

11
Complementarity View
  • Science and theology describe the same phenomena
    at different levels of explanation and with their
    own vocabulary
  • theology focuses on the why and who of a
    phenomenon and science focuses on the what and
    how
  • evolution

12
Weaknesses
  • Tendency to blend naturalistic worldview into
    theology
  • Miracles provide evidence for God and the
    supernatural (John 1025, 38 1411)
  • If such miracles can be accounted for without
    gaps at a natural level, how could they provide
    evidence for the supernatural?

13
Theology Foundational for Science
  • Theology provides the metaphysical foundation
    for science and helps to ground the latter by
    explaining the necessary preconditions of
    science- J.P. Moreland

14
Science Delimitative of Theology
  • Science provides the boundaries within which
    theology must work. Theology can only do its
    work only after consulting science.-J.P. Moreland

15
Interactive Approaches to the Same Reality
  • Science and theology are interacting approaches
    to the same reality. Occasionally they make
    competing, interacting claims about the same
    reality in such a way that theology sometimes
    implies that gaps will exist in scientific
    accounts at those points where God intervened.-
    J.P. Moreland

16
History of the Question, Where Does Life Come
From?
  • Spontaneous Generation- the idea that new life
    could spontaneously arise on a daily basis
  • Francesco Redi (1668)

17
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18
1864
19
From Pasteur to Darwin
  • We tell this story (of Pasteurs experiments) to
    beginning students of biology as though it
    represents a triumph of reason over mysticism.
    In fact, it is very nearly the opposite. The
    reasonable view was to believe in spontaneous
    generation the only alternative, to believe in a
    single, primary act of supernatural creation.
    There is no third position. George Wald
    (Harvard Biochemist)

20
From Pasteur to Darwin
  • The first theory places the question of the
    origin of life beyond the realm of scientific
    inquiry. It is a statement of faith in the power
    of a Supreme Being not subject to the laws of
    science. The second theory is also an act of
    faith. The act of faith consists in assuming
    that the scientific view of the origin of life is
    correct, without having concrete evidence to
    support that belief. Robert Jastrow (Astronomer)

21
The Controversial Nature of Prebiotic Evolution
  • A combination of geochemical evidence and
    laboratory experiment shows that such evolution
    is not only plausible, but almost undeniable
  • The origin of life appears at the moment to be
    almost a miracle, so many are the conditions
    which would have had to have been satisfactory to
    get it going- Francis Crick

22
Operational Science Vs. Origin Science
  • Operational Science- controlled conditions,
    repeatability, ability to manipulate
  • Makes hypotheses or models of unique events, much
    more speculative

23
Two Major Naturalistic Views on the Origin of Life
  • Panspermia- life was introduced on earth from
    outer space, perhaps by some higher intelligence
  • Prebiotic Soup formed on earth with all major
    chemical components of life

24
Naturalistic Proposed Stages in the development
of life
  • Stage 1- early earth atmosphere with water, H2,
    CH4, CO2, CO, NH4, and N2 but no O2
  • Stage 2-Electrical/UV energy generate amino
    acids, sugars, nucleic acids, and fatty acids
  • Stage 3- Monomers polymerize into polymers

25
Naturalistic Proposed Stages in the development
of life
  • Stage 4-Polymers of nucleic acids, proteins,
    carbohydrates, and lipids form protocells
  • Stage 5-True cells formed

26
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27
The Miller/Urey Experiment
  • 5 amino acids formed, as well as precursors for
    adenine
  • Similar experiments used to synthesize all five
    of the nitrogenous bases, and several sugars

28
Criticisms of the Miller/Urey Experiment
  • Methane and Ammonia were probably not present in
    the early atmosphere
  • A reducing atmosphere is required for such
    experiments, while evidence has NOT established
    the absence of oxygen, contrary to the textbook
    claims
  • Experimental Interference

29
Organic Compounds from Meteors?
  • Where did these come from?
  • Estimations?

30
From Monomers to Polymers
  • Short RNA molecules can form in a test tube
  • Polypeptides of up to 50 amino acids long can
    form spontaneously under certain conditions

31
From Polymers to Cells
  • Coacervates form from mixtures of polypeptides,
    nucleic acids, and polysaccharides
  • Protenoid Microspheres are similar structures
    made from proteins alone
  • Liposomes can form from a mixture of
    phospholipids and proteins

32
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33
Comments on These Protobionts
  • IF these structures formed, they would contain
    random mixtures of random molecules, NOT
    concentrated mixtures of a particular useful
    enzyme
  • Even if they had useful enzymes, they would not
    also contain the information for making those
    enzymes

34
Genetic Systems
  • Some RNA can self-replicate without proteins
  • Some RNA molecules can act as enzymes
  • We know that RNA is capable of storing
    information, and it might, perhaps, be able to
    replicate itself. But the hardest question to
    answer is how translation could have evolved.
    How a correlation between nucleotide sequences
    and amino acids sequences could have arisen
    remains a mystery

35
History of Life on Earth
  • Prokaryotic-Like Fossils are 3.5 billion years
    old- heterotrophs
  • Stromatolite fossils are about 3 billion years
    old-autotrophs
  • Eukaryotic cells appear about 1.7 billion years
    ago-heterotrophs and autotrophs

36
How Photosynthesis Would Change the Earth
  • Oxygen would build up in the atmosphere, causing
    the breakdown of the proposed primordial soup
  • Cells could use oxygen to extract more energy
    from organic compounds, assuming they had
    mechanisms for dealing with the toxicity of oxygen

37
Origins of Eukaryotes?
  • Mitochondria and Chloroplasts derived from one
    cell engulfing another?
  • No introns in mitochondrial and chloroplastic
    genes, ribosomes are similar to prokaryotic ones
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