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Author | Topic: Abiogenesis | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Black Member (Idle past 5205 days) Posts: 77 Joined: |
OK, DNAunion, you asked me to back up my statements, well here we go!
quote: Amino acid chains have been observed that can reproduce naturally: David H. Lee, Juan R. Granja, Jose A. Martinez, Kay Severin & M. Reza Ghadiri; "A self-replicating peptide" Nature 382, 525 - 528 (1996). Natural selection also happens: Yao, S.; Ghosh, I.; Chmielewski, J.; "Natural Selection in Self-Replicating Peptides", Peptides: Chemistry, Structure and Biology, 1998, 15, 0000. More about this: Yao, S.; Ghosh, I.; Zutshi, R.; Chmielewski, J.; "Self-replicating Peptide under Ionic Control", Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Eng., 1998, 37, 478-481. Yao, S.; Ghosh I.; Zutshi, R.; Chmielewski, J.; "A pH-Modulated Self-Replicating Peptide", J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1997, 119, 10559-10560.
quote: What I meant was RNA could come from peptide nucleic acids: Bhler, C., P. E. Nielsen, and L. E. Orgel, 1995. Template switching between PNA and RNA oligonucleotides. Nature 376: 578-581. See also: Piccirilli, J. A., 1995. RNA seeks its maker. Nature 376: 548-549. Also interesting, formamide has been found to catalyze the formation of nucleobases: Saladino R., C. Crestini, G. Costanzo, R. Negri, and E. Di Mauro, 2001. A possible prebiotic synthesis of purine, adenine, cytosine, and 4(3H)-pyrimidinone from formamide: Implications for the origin of life. Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry 9(5): 1249-1253.
quote: Yes, this is true: Jeffares, D. C., A. M. Poole and D. Penny, 1998. Relics from the RNA world. Journal of Molecular Evolution 46: 18-36. Poole, A. M., D. C. Jeffares, and D. Penny, 1998. The path from the RNA world. Journal of Molecular Evolution 46: 1-17. Leipe, D. D., L. Aravind, and E. V. Koonin, 1999. Did DNA replication evolve twice independently. Nucleic Acids Research 27: 3389-3401. Also, a deoxyribozyme can both catalyze its own replication and function to cleave RNA -- all without any protein enzymes: Levy, Matthew and Andrew D. Ellington, 2003. Exponential growth by cross-catalytic cleavage of deoxyribozymogens. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science USA 100(11): 6416-6421. Thus, the conclusion I come to is that abiogenesis is possible. BTW, I am sure I can find more references. If it interests you, let me know and I will... [This message has been edited by Black, 03-27-2004]
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1426 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
Against my better judgement about getting into an one-upmanship contest, I will answer this one simply:
You still have not shown where I say that viruses or prions are living. Until you do that your argument is all based on a false assumption of what I said. Your quotes do not show that. My posts do not show that. You are in error. Again. I have no need to converse with fools who repeat their mistakes. Especially after being corrected. Enjoy yourself. we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
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DNAunion Inactive Member |
quote: Where? You don't support ANYTHING. Simply posting article titles is not supporting one's position, neither is posting mere abstracts. Science is in the details. Now, if you have actual evidence that supports for your position, then you should present it.
quote: I figured you were referring to the GL (Ghadiri ligase), and now I see that you were here.
quote: That peptide was NOT formed naturally, nor can it replicate in any way relevant to abiogenesis (which was the context in which you made your assertions).
quote: If you have support, please provide it.
quote: Then present the evidence that shows this. There has been no experiment carried out under prebiotically plausible conditions that has produced RNA capable of replicating itself in an abiogenesis relevant manner.
quote: Now if you could just support that conclusion. [This message has been edited by DNAunion, 03-27-2004]
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DNAunion Inactive Member |
A note on why article titles are not sufficient to support one's position. Here is an article title from Origins of Life and Evolution of the Biosphere (vol 30, No 1, Feb 2000): Self-Programmable, Self-Assembling Two-Dimensional Genetic Matter.
What an impressive sounding paper! If the experiment accomplished what the title leads one to believe, then the origin of life would basically be solved. Genetic matter self-assembling and self-programming! Wow! But when one reads the actual paper, one sees a completely different picture. Basically, they dumped some nucleotides on a surface and since their were some irregularities in the arragenment that resulted....bingo, self-programmable, self-assembling, two-dimensional genetic matter. The actual science is not to be found in the title - it's in the details of the experiment. Maybe if some scientists were sued for false advertisement - which is about what their very misleading titles basically amount to - then we'd see more honesty. [This message has been edited by DNAunion, 03-27-2004]
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crashfrog Member (Idle past 1488 days) Posts: 19762 From: Silver Spring, MD Joined: |
A note on why article titles are not sufficient to support one's position. I agree that titles or even abstracts alone aren't really sufficient to support an argument, but often times the problem is that copyright issues prevent the article from being posted. Most scientific papers of any relevance simply aren't avaliable publicly without an academic site license or a fee. Sometimes we post abstracts because that's all the we can. In such situation I think a precis of the article in question is appropriate.
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DNAunion Inactive Member |
quote: Wow, big letters! You MUST be right! LOL! Here, let me use even bigger letters so I will be even more right.
I have shown BOTH of your offered supports to be flawed. Yep, that’s my claim and that’s fact.
quote: Nope, I addressed what you said. I’ve shown BOTH of your supports to be flawed and now you’re attempting to distance yourself from your errors. We all understand.
quote: Nope, you are.
quote: Tsk tsk...stooping to personal attacks...already!
quote: You haven’t corrected me one iota. On the other hand, I have shown BOTH of your offered supports to be flawed. Enjoy
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1426 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
Poor fool.
ALL you have shown is that viruses and prions are not living.
And I have not claimed they were living The fact is that your whole argument, that your ample demonstration via books quotes that viruses and prions are not living shows my arguments to be flawed, is based on the mistaken belief that I said they were. The fact is that you continue to attack something that is not there. After being shown that fact several times. The only conclusion is that you are congenitally incapable of either (q) seeing the truth or (8) admitting you made a mistake even to yourself. As such I will take pity on you and no longer reply to your posts. This will allow you to declare victory and assuage your ego.
AND -- You still have not shown where I say that viruses or prions are living. You made your bed and you lie in it. Enjoy. we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
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DNAunion Inactive Member |
quote: Tsk tsk...another personal attack. That makes two from you...zero from me. Let's all keep that in mind, shall we.
quote: Nope, what I've shown is that BOTH of your supports are flawed. That was my original point, and still is. quote: Nope, the fact is I trashed your flawed supports, and since then, you've tried to distract everyone by moving the goal posts.
quote: The options are (q) and (8)??? LOL! You're so steamed you can't even type correctly!
quote: You won't reply anymore? You mean I don't get to be called names by you anymore? Darned! And that you supposedly won't respond anymore doesn't matter anyway since I already won several posts ago.
quote: I've shown exactly what I intended to...that BOTH of your offered supports are flawed. You haven't even attempted to show otherwise. Enjoy. [This message has been edited by DNAunion, 03-27-2004]
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DNAunion Inactive Member |
quote: quote:
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DNAunion Inactive Member |
AbbyLeever has linked to or posted his famous conclusion on building blocks several times. I thought I’d take a look at his support.
quote: Nope. That conclusion does not necessarily follow from the support AbbyLeever presented (he/she seems to have a recurring problem with supporting his/her conclusions!). I read through all of his/her blocks on the page linked to and the only biological building blocks mentioned were amino acids and unnamed sugars (acetic acid and pyruvic acid, also mentioned, are not typically considered biological building blocks — they’re not monomers that are linked together to form polymers). Conspicuously missing were nucleotides, the building blocks of nucleic acids, which are the (or at least one of the) primary molecules focused on in OOL research.. As far as polymers of the basic biological building blocks, conspicuously missing were both proteins and RNA (and DNA). No nucleotides, no proteins, and no RNA! Seems AbbyLeever draws his own conclusions and mistakenly believes he/she has supported them to an extent that anyone who doesn’t agree with him/her is irrational ( it should be clear to the rational mind). He/she seems blinded to reality.
quote: Another conclusion AbbyLeever forgot to support. What evidence did AbbyLeever give for self-replicating proteins forming prebiotically? The rational mind knows the answer...0! Shoot, he didn’t even support the idea that proteins could form prebiotically, let alone self-replicating ones.
quote: Will it? Necessarily? Has AbbyLeever never heard of the error catastrophe?
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1426 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
For me the search for the elusive transition from non-life to life has to be two pronged:
(1) from the bottom up -- looking for what happens naturally in a variety of environments to build more and more complex molecules from the materials available. This search also includes simulating a variety of early earth environments and possible environments on other planets (mars) or moons (europa). These molecules are the building blocks, making towers from them is the quest. (2) from the top down -- reducing life to a bare minimum, also in a variety of environments to find what can be done away with from the evolved systems and still have a (possibly crude and likely inefficient) form of life. The variables will likely change with different environments and sources of energy that go with them. This is where LUCA comes into the picture. Taking the skyscraping towers of today and going back through time to the original huts. As such research is done from both sides an awareness will build about how near one is to the other and bridges can begin to be built ... studies on how to get from tower foundation (D) to small tower structure (42) , very much like the Golden Gate bridge was built from each side of the bay in closing increments even though most engineers of the day said it could not be done. we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
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secondlaw Inactive Member |
I have not seen anything stated about this in the current thread so I thought I would make mention of it.
In short, mathematically speaking, it is impossible for life to come from non-life. Given the enormity of the 'age' of the universe, still one does not have enough time or probability for proteins to be developed on their own by chance, let alone DNA. It's one thing to look at the present circumstances and say, "Because we are, it must have happened." But it is a completely different ball of wax to say that it really did all by chance. I am sure that DNAunion can attest to the intricacies of DNA, and the difficulties that arise when trying to consider this all just coming together at the right time and making life. If asked, I have documentation showing statistical evidence that the chance of life from non-life is nil (10 to the power of 1.4 million).
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MisterOpus1 Inactive Member |
quote: In short, mathmatically speaking, it is impossible for you to even exist. So how come you are?
quote: So fill it in with "Godidit" without any verifiable, tested or observed evidence?
quote: Who said it had to happen by chance alone? Why couldn't some events be selectively favored over others?
quote: I wish I could give credit to myself over the following analogy, but someone else posted it and I simply pasted it. So here's a counter analogy with a little modification of my own: "Consider the probability of your own existence. Suppose the Earth is as young as many creationists say it is,about 5000 years old. What then is the probability that you would have been born? Let's generously assume that the average length of a generation over the last 5000 years has been 30 years. Let's also assume, very generously, that the average probability of an individual living long enough to have children and then to actually have them is 95%. The probability that all of your great-great-grandfathers and great-great-grandmothers survived and had children leading to you (or to anyone) would then be about 1 in 25 million! Somehow we all won the lottery. This example, is a good example of the posterior probabilityfallacy. The probability of an event occurring, after it has already occurred, is exactly 100%. Just because a given protein is configured in a certain way doesn't mean it couldn't have been just as successfully configured in a bazillion other possible ways. Abiogenesis, by accumulating positive changes and eliminating the negative ones, may have ensured life." And this analogy is being very generous. If you accept an old earth (older than 5000 years or so), the stat. of 1 in 25 million goes through the roof. However, it is a logical fallacy to begin with.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1426 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
Ah, the old improbable probability problem ...
The errors in this are multifold and pervasive
{{text in pink has been added by edit}} [This message has been edited by AbbyLeever, 03-31-2004] we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
{{{Buddha walks off laughing with joy}}}
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1426 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
ahahahahaa I love it.
I used a similar argument to "The probability of an event occurring, after it has already occurred, is exactly 100%" on another board (I said the probability defaults to 1 after it has occurred) and the other person didn't understand it ... that there is no probability that it could not have occurred anymore, for we are here. we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
{{{Buddha walks off laughing with joy}}}
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