There's a silly
article recently added on the Quanta online science site. The article
is entitled “Dividing Droplets Could Explain Life's Origin.”
Apparently some scientists have discovered that some lifeless particles
can naturally divide, and some of them are talking as if this fact
may help us explain the origin of life. But it has been common
knowledge for thousands of years that round lifeless particles can
naturally divide. This has been known to anyone who ever closely
looked at the rain drops on the side of a tree during a rainy day,
and who noticed that big drops often divide into smaller drops while
they are dripping down the bark.
Why is it very silly
to be claiming that dividing lifeless particles do anything to
help explain the origin of life? It's because cells are more like
miniature cities than like raindrops. So when a cell divides, it
isn't like a raindrop splitting into two. When a cell divides, it's
more like a city magically making a copy of itself, like you might
have if Miami were to make a copy of itself which started floating on
the Atlantic ocean.
The claim that cells
are like cities is made at this science education site, where we are
told that a cell's membrane is like a city wall, that a cytoskeleton
is like a city's transport system, that the cytosol is similar to a
city's streets, that the lysosomes are like a city's recycling plant,
that the mitochondria are like a city's power plants, that the
nucleus is like a city's library, that the ribosomes are like a
city's factories, and that the endoplasmic reticulum is like a city's
industrial park. One does nothing to explain the origin of such
incredibly complex functionality by talking about a division of tiny
natural particles or droplets that are not complex, and don't have
anything like intricate functionality.
But
it may be argued that the cells we observe in our microscopes are
more complicated than the first living cells. That's true, but even
the first living cells must have been incredibly complicated, far too
complicated to have arisen by any known natural process. A team of 9
scientists wrote a scientific paper entitled, “Essential genes of a
minimal bacterium.” It analyzed a type of bacteria (Mycoplasma
genitalium)
that has “the smallest
genome of any organism that can be grown in pure culture.”
According to wikipedia's article, this bacteria has 525 genes
consisting of 580,070 base pairs. The paper concluded that 382 of
this bacteria's protein-coding genes (72 percent) are essential. So multiplying
that 580,070 by 72 percent, we get a figure of about 418,000 base
pairs in the genome that are essential functionality.
What is the chance of such
functionality falling into place accidentally? Essentially zero. Analysis of what is
known as the fitness landscape of proteins indicates that proteins
are highly sensitive to changes, with minor changes disrupting their
performance. They “can be exquisitely sensitive to changes in the
amino acid sequence,” as a biology text notes. For example, an
analysis of the fitness landscape of a protein used in fluorescence
found that “3/4 of the derivatives with a single mutation showing
reduced fluorescence and half of the derivatives with four mutations
being completely non-fluorescent.” So a protein has to be “just
right” to do its job – a few random changes here and there, and
you break its functionality.
Straightforward
calculations suggest that you would need something like 1070
tries before random combinations would produce a particular protein.
Natural selection would not help, because we are talking about
proteins that need to appear before any cellular life appears, and
before natural selection can begin. The miracle of a functional
protein appearing would need to occur not just once but hundreds of
times before even a primitive cell could appear.
Then there's the
unsolved problem of homochirality. Our cells use only left-handed
amino acids and right-handed sugars. Were it not for that fact, it
wouldn't be possible to make complex proteins. It would be like
trying to finish a jigsaw puzzle when half of the pieces were turned
upside-down; in that case there would be no way to fit the pieces
together. But when amino acids are created in the
laboratory, half are left-handed and half are right-handed; and so it is for sugars. You would
have to have seemingly impossible lucky breaks needed for all amino
acids to have the same left-handedness, with the sugars all being
right-handed. Something like this seems rather like an additional
winning 20-digit lottery ticket that needs to exactly match before
life can get started. And I won't even go into the difficulties of explaining the origin of the genetic code, an ordered system of symbolic representations used by all living things.
A simple particle
splitting into two is very easy to explain. A self-reproducing cell
is a very, very hard thing to explain. Even if such a cell were the
simplest early cell, and acted merely like a self-reproducing machine
rather than a self-reproducing city, then you still have two gigantic
difficulties. The first is explaining how the machine appeared in the
first place, and the second is explaining how the machine learned the
trick of being able to make a copy of itself. We don't even
understand very well how today's cells are able to reproduce. A University of
Chicago science site says, “There are many remaining mysteries
about how cells perform this remarkable feat.”
An example of
machine-like functionality in our cells is the cell component called
a centriole, which a biology text tells us is something that “looks
more like something made in a machine shop than in a living cell”
(Life Itself by Boyce Rensberger, page 59). The same text
says molecules of tubulin in a cell are “ like magic bricks that
assemble themselves into a wall” (page 23). The same type of
“magic brick” behavior is found in a vast number of complex
proteins, which spontaneously assemble themselves into very intricate and complicated 3D shapes
through a process called protein folding that scientists have been
trying to figure out for decades, with very little success.
Centrioles
Because explaining the appearance of a self-reproducing cell with hundreds of proteins is literally trillions of times harder than explaining the existence of simple particles or droplets splitting into two, I estimate that the Quanta article in question is guilty of a trillion-fold underestimation of the difficulty of cellular abiogenesis. But the article is in good company, because requirements underestimation is pretty much the central sin of the modern theoretical scientist (along with the sin of claiming to understand things that are not actually understood). Such folks often seem to be considering Everest-sized requirements for the existence of creatures such as us, and then trying to paint these requirements as if they were trifling. This involves trying to make high, high mountains look like molehills smaller than a basketball.
A similar example of
nonsense-speak is found in this recent news story which tells us
that the “building blocks of life” have been found 200 light-years away. What were these“building blocks”?
Merely carbon, nitrogen, and water.
Calling such things
“building blocks of life” is, of course, nonsense. Using a
similar approach, you might print a big headline screaming “BUILDING
BLOCKS OF CITIES FOUND ON MARS,” and then mention that these
“building blocks” were merely unorganized deposits of carbon,
nitrogen, and water. The building blocks of cities are houses, and the
building blocks of life are things like proteins, cells, and nucleic
acids such as DNA. No such things have been found in distant space.
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