Abiogenesis
Abiogenesis – A brief history
Abiogenesis – The problems
Unfortunately Miller’s attempt to demonstrate the possibility of
abiogenesis (that life can come from non-life) did not honestly simulate
conditions on the primordial earth. For example, oxygen was evidently
present on the early earth -- but the presence of oxygen prohibits the
development of organic compounds. Even though we require an abundance of
oxygen to survive, our bodies also need many special adaptations in
order to manage it safely. In the 1950’s, origin-of-life researchers
assumed that the early earth had very little oxygen. Geological evidence
now suggests, however, that substantial quantities of oxygen were
present in the earth’s earliest atmosphere. If the gases that scientists
now believe were present on the early earth were to be used in the
correct proportion, no such amino acids are produced.
But let us suppose that not only was a naturalistic mechanism discovered
which could segregate the left-handed forms needed for life, but also a
soup was discovered which possessed a mystical capacity to form
proteins. To form a living cell requires hundreds of specialized
proteins that need to be precisely coordinated. We would also need to
produce DNA, RNA, a cell membrane, and a host of other chemical
compounds -- not to mention arranging them into their correct locations
to perform their respective functions.
Abiogenesis – Conclusion
Clearly to get from the Miller-Urey experiment to a living cell by
unguided materialistic processes requires that improbabilities be
stacked upon improbabilities. For this reason, Dean Kenyon rightly
concludes: “It is an enormous problem, how you could get together in
one tiny, sub-microscopic volume of the primitive ocean all of the
hundreds of different molecular components you would need in order for a
self-replicating cycle to be established.”
Even though Darwin himself focused on the origin of species, some
scientists have tried to apply the concept of evolution to the first
life to form the concept of abiogenesis. In 1924, Russian biochemist
Alexander Oparin proposed that living cells arose gradually from
nonliving matter through a sequence of chemical reactions. According to
Oparin, gases present in the atmosphere of primitive earth, when induced
by lightening or other sources of energy, would react to form simple
organic compounds. These compounds would subsequently self-assemble into
increasingly complex molecules such as proteins. These, in turn, would
organize themselves into living cells.
In 1953, Stanley Miller and Harold Urey tested Oparin’s hypothesis by
conducting an experiment that attempted to simulate the atmospheric
conditions of primitive earth. In their experiment, water boiled into
vapor at the bottom of a flask and then passed through an apparatus,
combining with ammonia, methane, and hydrogen. They then subjected the
resulting mixture to a 50,000-volt-spark before cooling and collecting
it in a trap at the bottom of the apparatus. When Miller and Urey
examined the resulting tar-like substance, they found a collection of
amino acids, the building blocks of life.
But let us suppose that Miller’s experiment faithfully recreated
conditions on the early earth, would the experiment be validated? A
further major difficulty is that such experiments cannot produce the
right kinds of amino acids. Amino acid conformations exist as
mirror-isomers. In other words, there are left-handed (L-form) amino
acids, as well as right-handed (D-form) amino acids. The amino acids
that comprise living proteins are of the left-handed form, yet in
simulations such as Miller’s, an equal mixture of left-handed and
right-handed amino acids are produced. All known natural mechanisms by
which amino acids are produced, produce amino acids in roughly the same
proportion of right- and left-handed forms. But let us suppose that some
naturalistic mechanism were discovered which could indeed segregate the
left-handed forms needed for life. It would still remain inexplicable
how the L-form amino acids became correctly ordered with the proper
links (peptide bonds) to form proteins. The odds would still be stacked
highly against obtaining even a single protein from a primordial soup
made up of exclusively L-form amino acids.
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