The Errors of the National Academy of Sciences Booklet - Harun Yahya
THE ERRORS OF THE NATIONAL
ACADEMY OF SCIENCES BOOKLET A Reply to the National Academy of Sciences
Booklet, Science and Creationism
THE NAS'S ERROR REGARDING THE ORIGIN
OF LIFE
There is no doubt that the
first question the theory of evolution, which claims to explain the
origin of life, has to answer is how life in an inanimate universe
began and how inanimate materials came to produce living ones. Yet
for some reason, the National Academy of Sciences' booklet Science
and Creationism, prepared with the aim of putting forward "the
most important proofs of the theory of evolution," contains no answer
to that question. Instead, it contains the NAS authors' assumptions,
which portray the theory of evolution as if it were something unquestioned
and definitively proved, with no room for doubt, and which paint a
"rosy picture" for evolutionists. This is what the authors have to
say, as though the question of how it is that inanimate matter gave
rise to living things as a result of chance chemical processes were
not one of the greatest dilemmas facing the theory of evolution:
For those who are studying the origin of life, the question
is no longer whether life could have originated by chemical processes
involving nonbiological components. The question instead has become
which of many pathways might have been followed to produce the first
cells. (Science and Creationism, p. 6)
This is how the authors refer to the probability of the
"chemical process" in question:
Experiments conducted under conditions
intended to resemble those present on the primitive Earth have resulted
in the production of some of the chemical components of proteins,
DNA, and RNA. Some of these molecules also have been detected in meteorites
from outer space and in interstellar space by astronomers using radio
telescopes. Scientists have concluded that the "building blocks of
life" could have been available early in Earth's history. (Science
and Creationism, p.5)
The conditions in the earliest periods
of the Earth are among the most important factors making it
impossible for the cell and its building blocks to have emerged
by themselves. Laboratory experiments imitating these conditions
have always ended in failure.
In essence, what the NAS authors and evolutionists are
claiming is this: In the environment of the inanimate world, commonly
known as the "primeval soup," all the materials necessary for life
to emerge existed, and these coincidentally came together by means
of chemical processes to create the first living cell.
Although the NAS in particular does not actually spell
it out, not one piece of evidence exists to back up this claim. In
fact, the evidence all goes to invalidate the evolutionists' claims.
Furthermore, experts on the subject, including evolutionists, decline
to use such a confident and certain manner of speaking as the NAS
writers, and accept that the subject of the origin of life is an unknown
as far as the theory of evolution goes. Just the realization that
the primeval Earth's atmosphere contained sufficient quantities of
oxygen to tear apart any organic molecules (the establishment of the
fact that it was not "reducing" as chemists put it) places the theory
of evolution in a most difficult position as regards the origin of
life. Noam Lahav, for instance, the evolutionist author of the book
Biogenesis: Theories of Life's Origins, says:
[B]y challenging the assumption of a
reducing atmosphere, we challenge the very existence of the "pre-biotic
soup", with its richness of biologically important organic compounds.
Moreover, so far, no geochemical evidence for the existence of a pre-biotic
soup has been published. Indeed, a number of scientists have challenged
the pre-biotic soup concept, noting that even if it existed, the concentration
of organic building blocks in it would have been too small to be meaningful
for pre-biotic evolution.1
In other words:
The high level of oxygen in the primeval atmosphere is
an obstacle to the emergence of "the building blocks of life."
Even if it is assumed that these did emerge, it is impossible
for them to have given rise to proteins, RNA or DNA by means of chemical
reactions or chance. That is because proteins, RNA or DNA contain
the most concentrated amounts of information and it is statistically
impossible for that information to emerge at random.
Careful attention reveals that the NAS authors ignore
both facts, and attempt to gloss over the second in particular by
employing a style that gives them away: many people hearing the words
"the building blocks of life" might well think that "these building
blocks exist, which means that life can emerge by itself." (This is
the impression the NAS authors hoped to create.) This is mistaken,
however, and also deceptive (from the NAS' point of view), because
the "building blocks" in question are simple organic compounds such
as amino-acids or nucleic acids, and it is impossible for these to
turn into such complex structures as RNA or DNA. In just the same
way, the existence of bricks, the "building blocks" of a house, does
not mean that these actually came together by chance to make a house.
The presence of all the materials necessary
for the construction of a house is not enough for that construction
to actually take place. There is also a need for rational and
intelligent architects, construction engineers, technicians,
laborers, etc. The same thing applies to the construction of
the cell.
The NAS claims that many paths are known which might
have been followed to create the first cell. That claim is most definitely
incorrect. No scientist has found any means by which the first cell
could have been created from inanimate matter. Professor Klaus Dose,
director of the Johannes Gutenberg University Biochemistry Institute,
expresses the problem in these terms:
More than 30 years of experimentation
on the origin of life in the fields of chemical and molecular evolution
have led to a better perception of the immensity of the problem of
the origin of life on earth rather than to its solution. At present
all discussions on principal theories and experiments in the field
either end in stalemate or in a confession of ignorance. New lines
of thinking and experimentation must be tried… Considerable disagreements
between scientists have arisen about detailed evolutionary steps.
The problem is that the principal evolutionary processes from prebiotic
molecules to progenotes [the earliest genetic organisms] have not
been proven by experimentation and that the environmental conditions
under which these processes occurred are not known. Moreover, we do
not actually know where the genetic information of all living cells
originates, how the first replicable polynucleotides (nucleic acids)
evolved, or how the extremely complex structure-function relationships
in modern cells came into existence... It appears that the field has
now reached a stage of stalemate, a stage in which hypothetical arguments
often dominate over facts based on experimentation or observation.
2
The evolutionist biologist Andrew Scott
makes a similar admission, saying:
Take some matter, heat while stirring
and wait. That is the modern version of Genesis. The 'fundamental'
forces of gravity, electromagnetism and the strong and weak nuclear
forces are presumed to have done the rest... But how much of this
neat tale is firmly established, and how much remains hopeful speculation?
In truth, the mechanism of almost every major step, from chemical
precursors up to the first recognizable cells, is the subject of either
controversy or complete bewilderment. 3
David A. Kaufman, a professor of biochemistry,
admits that the theory of evolution cannot account for the origin
of genetic life in these terms:
Evolution lacks a scientifically acceptable explanation
of the source of the precisely planned codes within cells without
which there can be no specific proteins and hence, no life.4
Instead of admitting that the theory of evolution offers
no explanation however, the NAS authors prefer to resort to deception
by painting an unrealistic picture in its favor. They put forward the
groundless claim that there is proof of evolution in all areas and that
they possess several hypotheses accounting for the origin of life, which
is something that no expert on the subject could possibly confirm. This
rosy picture painted by evolutionists very definitely fails to reflect
the true state of affairs. Each one of the hypotheses regarding the
origin of life is in the same quandary, and these alternatives all fail
to resolve the problem; they all merely pose the question in a different
form. One of these so-called alternatives in the Science and Creationism
is the "RNA World" hypothesis. Despite being at present one of the most
popular hypotheses amongst evolutionists, the RNA World theory actually
contains a great many difficulties, as we shall be seeing, and is clearly
a scenario which could never have taken place.
The RNA World Scenario
In the book Science and Creationism, the RNA
World hypothesis is suggested as one of the alternative (and reasonable)
explanations of the origin of life. However, the RNA World hypothesis
is at a loss to account for the origin of life just like all the explanations
put forth by evolutionists.
The discovery in the 1970s that the gases originally
existing in the primeval Earth's atmosphere would have rendered amino-acid
synthesis impossible was a serious blow to the theory of molecular
evolution. Evolutionists then had to face the fact that the "primitive
atmosphere experiments" by Stanley Miller, Sydney Fox, Cyril Ponnamperuma,
and others were invalid. For this reason, in the 1980s the evolutionists
tried again. As a result, the RNAWorld hypothesis was advanced. This
scenario proposed that, not proteins, but rather the RNA molecules
that contained the information for proteins, were formed first.
Like the evolutionists' other scenarios,
the RNA World hypothesis is a long way from bringing an evolutionary
explanation to bear on the origin of life. Unable to explain
how DNA could have come into being on its own, evolutionists
face the same question with regard to RNA.
According to this scenario, advanced by Harvard chemist
Walter Gilbert in 1986, inspired by the discovery of "ribozymes" by
Thomas Cech, billions of years ago an RNA molecule somehow capable
of replicating itself happened to come into existence. Under the influence
of the environmental conditions surrounding it, this RNA molecule
suddenly began to produce proteins. Later still, the need arose to
store their information in a second molecule, and the DNA molecule
somehow came into being.
This scenario, which is hard even to imagine and which
consists of a chain of impossible events, enlarged the dimension of
the problem instead of explaining the origin of life, and gave rise
to a number of unanswerable questions. Some of these questions are:
1 - Whilst it is impossible to account
for the emergence of even a single one of the nucleotides which comprise
RNA, how did fictitious nucleotides manage to come together in an
appropriate sequence to form RNA? The evolutionist biologist John
Horgan admits the impossibility of RNA's having come into existence
by chance:
As researchers continue to examine the RNA-World concept
closely, more problems emerge. How did RNA initially arise? RNA and
its components are difficult to synthesize in a laboratory under the
best of conditions, much less under really plausible ones.5
2 - Even if we assume that it did come
into existence by chance, with what consciousness did this RNA molecule
consisting solely of a string of nucleotides decide to replicate itself,
and by what mechanism did it succeed in doing so? Where did it find
the nucleotides it would use while replicating itself? The evolutionist
microbiologists Gerald Joyce and Leslie Orgel express the hopelessness
of the position in these terms:
This discussion… has, in a sense, focused
on a straw man: the myth of a self-replicating RNA molecule that arose
de novo from a soup of random polynucleotides. Not only is such a
notion unrealistic in light of our current understanding of prebiotic
chemistry, but it would strain the credulity of even an optimist's
view of RNA's catalytic potential. 6
According to the RNA World hypothesis,
ribosomes need to form at the same time as RNA, because RNA
requires ribosomes, a protein-manufacturing mechanism. However,
ribosomes are exceedingly complex organelles consisting of complex
proteins. It is impossible to account for the origin of ribosomes
in terms of chemical reactions.
3 - Even if we go so far as to accept that RNA capable
of replicating itself did emerge in the primeval Earth's atmosphere
and that every kind of amino acid the RNA would use was present in
unlimited quantities and that all these impossibilities in some way
happened, that still is not sufficient for the emergence of a single
protein molecule. That is because RNA is nothing but information insofar
as protein structure is concerned. Amino acids are the raw material.
Yet there is no "mechanism" here that might produce the protein. Considering
the existence of RNA as sufficient for the production of protein is
just as meaningless as expecting the thousands of parts that would
go to make up a car to congregate on the blueprint of that car and
for the vehicle to assemble itself.
A protein is produced at the end of exceedingly complicated
processes within the cell inside an organelle known as the ribosome,
together with the help of a large number of enzymes. The ribosome
is a complicated cell structure consisting of RNA and proteins. For
that reason, this situation involves a series of impossible assumptions,
such as the ribosome's coincidentally coming into existence at the
same time. Even the Nobel prize-winning Jacques Monod, one of the
best-known proponents of the theory of evolution, explained that protein
synthesis can by no means be considered to depend merely on the information
in the nucleic acids:
The code is meaningless
unless translated. The modern cell's translating machinery consists
of at least 50 macromolecular components, which are themselves coded
in DNA: the code cannot be translated otherwise than by products of
translation themselves. It is the modern expression of omne vivum
ex ovo. When and how did this circle become
closed? It is exceedingly difficult to imagine.7
By what means could an RNA chain in the primitive atmosphere
have taken such a decision, and what methods could it have employed
to carry out protein production and perform the functions of 50 special
components? Evolutionists have no answer to this question. One article
in the well-known scientific journal Nature stated that the concept
of "self-replicating RNA" was a totally imaginary one, and that no
such RNA had ever been produced under experimental conditions:
DNA replication is so error-prone that
it needs the prior existence of protein enzymes to improve the copying
fidelity of a gene-size piece of DNA. "Catch-22" say Maynard Smith
and Szathmary. So, wheel on RNA with its now recognized properties
of carrying both informational and enzymatic activity, leading the
authors to state: "In essence, the first RNA molecules did not need
a protein polymerase to replicate them; they replicated themselves."
Is this a fact or a hope? I would have thought it relevant to point
out for 'biologists in general' that not one
self-replicating RNA has emerged to date from quadrillions (1024)
of artificially synthesized, random RNA sequences.8
Stanley
Miller, a professor at the University of California-San Diego, and the
well-known evolutionist Leslie Orgel, a colleague of Francis Crick,
use the term "scenario" for the possibility that "life might have begun
with the RNA World." In an article called "The Origin of Life on the
Earth," published in Scientific American in its October 1994 edition,
Orgel set out the features that RNA would need to possess and the impossibility
of its doing so:
This scenario could have occurred, we noted, if prebiotic
RNA had two properties not evident today: a capacity to replicate
without the help of proteins and an ability to catalyze every step
of protein synthesis. 9
It can clearly be seen that expecting Orgel's precondition
of these two complex processes from a molecule such as RNA is a violation
of scientific thinking. Concrete scientific facts reveal that the
"RNA World" thesis, a new version of the claim that life emerged by
chance, is a scenario which could never have happened.
John Horgan
In his book The End of Science, John Horgan
describes a conversation with Stanley Miller, who gave his name to
the famous Miller experiment which subsequently proved to be invalid.
Miller said that he found the latest theories put forward regarding
the origin of life to be meaningless, and rather despised them:
In fact, almost 40 years after his
original experiment, Miller told me that solving the riddle of the
origin of life had turned out to be more difficult than he or anyone
else had envisioned… Miller seemed unimpressed with any of the current
proposals on the origin of life, referring to them as "nonsense" or
"paper chemistry." He was so contemptuous of some hypotheses that,
when I asked his opinion of them, he merely shook his head, sighed
deeply, and snickered-as if overcome by the folly of humanity. Stuart
Kauffman's theory of autocatalysis fell into this category. "Running
equations through a computer does not constitute an experiment," Miller
sniffed. Miller acknowledged that scientists may never know precisely
where and when life emerged.10
Even the fiercest proponents of evolution, such as Miller,
who led the effort to discover an evolutionary explanation for the origin
of life, make statements of despair as far as the theory of evolution
goes, and thus clearly reflect the enormous difficulties in which the
theory finds itself.
THE NAS'S CELL FROM MARS ERROR
It is also suggested in the booklet Science and Creationism that
the first cells might have come to earth from Mars. (Science and
Creationism p. 7)
Evolutionists are unable to explain how
the first cell could have formed in the conditions of the primitive
Earth. One of the places evolutionists seek refuge is Mars.
However, what is impossible on Earth is also impossible on Mars.
Mars is a refuge for evolutionists who are unable to
explain how the first cell might have come into being by chance in
the conditions of the primeval world. However, a theory which cannot
explain how the first cell came into existence on Earth will encounter
just the same difficulty on Mars. Indeed, a great many difficulties
and obstacles will face a cell assumed to have emerged on Mars in
the course of its journey to the Earth, which makes the claim that
this first cell emerged on Mars quite untenable. The well-known physicist
George Gamow states how any cell on such a "space voyage" would inevitably
die:
It must be borne in mind, however,
that such travelling spores would be threatened by another agent much
more perilous than the danger of "freezing to death." It is now known
that the ultraviolet rays of the Sun, which are almost entirely absorbed
by the terrestrial atmosphere, will rapidly kill any micro-organism
that ventures beyond this protective shield. Thus, life must be inevitably
extinguished in such travelling spores long before they are able to
reach even the nearest planet. Besides, quite apart from the problem
of the preservation of life during the long interstellar voyage, the
"cosmozoan hypothesis" becomes rather senseless in the light of modern
knowledge concerning the age and origin of the stellar universe.11
Professor Gamow's words are very clear, and the experiment
shows that even if a cell did somehow emerge on Mars, it would be
impossible for it to reach the Earth.
Here, what evolutionists ignore is the complexity of
the cell structure. They attempt to give the impression that the only
difficulty regarding the emergence of the first cell is the conditions
on the Earth. As a result, they claim that if those conditions on
Earth were unsuitable, the first cell must have formed on Mars. The
fact is, however, that the point which really makes it impossible
for the first cell to have come into existence by itself, under random
conditions, is the complex structure and superior organization possessed
by the cell.
The theory of evolution is unable to explain
how a cell turned into fish, birds, flowers, and human beings.
The cell comprises a great many different organelles,
each with its own very complex structure. For instance, the cell membrane
permits certain compounds to enter the cell and keeps others out.
It recognizes substances harmful to the cell and refuses to admit
them. The nucleic acids in the cell (DNA and RNA) contain all the
information about the organism. The amount of information contained
in these structures can be compared to that in a whole library. The
cell also contains protein-producing ribosomes. These use hundreds
of amino acids to produce protein. Each separate part is of a wondrous
complexity. None of these can exist on its own, and if even one is
missing, the cell cannot form. For that reason, all the cell's components
and organelles must have existed together from the very beginning.
It is impossible, as the theory of evolution would have us believe,
for these tiny components to have come together stage by stage over
millions of years.
Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe,
both professors of mathematics and astronomy, explain how there is
no possibility that life could have come about on its own as the result
of chance, either on the Earth or on another planet, in these terms:
The trouble is that there are about two thousand enzymes,
and the chance of obtaining them all in a random trial is only one
part in (1020)2,000 = 1040,000, an outrageously small probability
that could not be faced even if the whole universe consisted of organic
soup. If one is not prejudiced either by social beliefs or by a scientific
training into the conviction that life originated on the Earth [by
chance or natural processes], this simple calculation wipes the idea
entirely out of court.
. . . Life cannot have had a random beginning. Troops
of monkeys thundering away at random on typewriters could not produce
the works of Shakespeare, for the practical reason that the whole
observable universe is not large enough to contain the necessary monkey
hordes, the necessary typewriters, and certainly the waste paper baskets
required for the deposition of wrong attempts. The same is true for
living material.12
As we have seen, what makes the emergence of the first
cell impossible is not only the unsuitable conditions in the primeval
atmosphere, but also the complex structure of the cell and the fact
that that structure could not have come about by chance. There is
thus no reason why something which is impossible on Earth should be
able to take place on Mars. In the same way that it is impossible
for random letters thrown onto the ground to make a meaningful phrase
on Earth, so it is also impossible on Mars. Nobody can say "If we
throw them onto the ground on Mars, a coherent phrase will emerge."
Unable to explain how the first cell could
have come about by chance, and in order to deny God's creation,
evolutionists suggest that the first cell was brought to Earth
by creatures from space.
The Nobel prize-winning Professor Manfred Eigen states
that the thesis that life came from space in no way resolves the difficulties
facing the theory of evolution:
The discrepancy between the numbers
of sequences testable in practice and imaginable in theory is so great
that attempts at explanation by shifting the location of the origin
of life from Earth to outer space do not offer an acceptable solution
to the dilemma. The mass of the universe is 'only' 1029 times, and
its volume 'only' 1057 times that of the Earth. 13
Furthermore, a cell coming to the earth from space cannot
solve the difficulties of the theory of evolution, since the theory
is unable to explain how a single cell managed to turn into fish,
birds, flowers and human beings.
Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe were among the
most ardent supporters of the idea that life might have come from
space (1981). Francis Crick (1981) and Leslie Orgel (1973) also proposed
the idea of "panspermia" (the claim that amino acids in meteors from
space reacted with organic substances, thus producing life). They
even took the idea further, suggesting that life had been designed
by living things in space and then sent to Earth. This is just as
futile as claiming that amino acids or the first cell came to Earth
via meteorites, since the question obviously remains of how the aliens
who designed life themselves came into being.
What compels evolutionists to put forward these claims,
for which there is no evidence and which have no other value than
as fodder for science fiction films? The reason is that these people
see that it is impossible for an evolutionary approach to account
for the origin of life and are desperately seeking a materialist explanation
at all costs. Just to avoid believing in the existence of God, these
scientists have suffered such a collapse of logic as to be able to
believe, without a shred of evidence, in the existence of space creatures-and
are unable to see that the question of how these creatures came into
existence will again leave them staring creation in the face.
1. Noam Lahav, Biogenesis: Theories of Life's
Origins, Oxford University Press, 1999, pp. 138-139. 2. Klaus Dose, "The Origin Of Life: More Questions Than Answers",
Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, vol. 13, no.4, 1988, p. 348. 3. Andrew Scott, "Update on Genesis", New Scientist, vol. 106,
May 2, 1985, p. 30. 4. David B. Loughran, SBS Vital Topics, April 1996, Stewarton
Bible School, Stewarton, Scotland; http://www.rmplc.co.uk/eduweb/sites/ sbs777/vital/evolutio.html 5. John Horgan, "In the Beginning," Scientific American, vol.
264, February 1991, p. 119. 6. G.F. Joyce, L. E. Orgel, "Prospects for Understanding the Origin
of the RNA World," In the RNA World, New York: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press,
1993, p. 13. 7. Jacques Monod, Chance and Necessity, New York: 1971, p.143.
(emphasis added) 8. Gabby L. Dover, 1999, Looping the Evolutionary loop. Review
of the origin of life from the birth of life to the origin of language, Nature,
399: 218. (emphasis added) 9. Leslie E. Orgel, "The Origin of Life on the Earth," http://proxy.arts.uci.edu/~nideffer/
Hawking/early_proto/orgel.html 10. John Horgan, The End of Science, MA Addison-Wesley, 1996,
p. 139. 11 George Gamow, Biography of the Earth, Viking Press,
1959, p. 156 12 Sir Fred Hoyle-Chandra Wickramasinghe, Evolution from
Space, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1984, p. 24, p. 148 13. Manfred Eigen, Steps Toward Life, Oxford: Oxford
University Pres, 1992, p. 11