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- #126
Once more exposing their thorough-going non-comprehension for cosmological theory, in their desperation to drag the debate down to the usual 'Darwinian/Anti theist' argument, they ply ad nauseum in every other thread.
The title of the thread (and I didn't start the thread) is "Creation vs. Darwin's MacroEvolution Myth." There is no "vs." and there is no "myth." As has been explained repeatedly, (and whether you like it or not or whether you agree with it or not) evolution is a scientific fact.
The scientific community overwhelmingly recognizes that 3.6 billion years ago there existed the last universal common ancestor, (LUCA), of all living things presently on Earth. It was likely a single-cell organism. It had a few hundred genes. (355 genes according to a 2016 study). It already had complete blueprints for DNA replication, protein synthesis, and RNA transcription. It had all the basic components - such as lipids - that modern organisms have. From LUCA forward, it's relatively easy to see how life as we know it evolved. That's evolution.
Before 3.6 billion years, however, there is no hard evidence about how LUCA arose from a boiling cauldron of chemicals that formed on Earth after the creation of the planet about 4.6 billion years ago. That's abiogenesis. Two different things.
Maybe 'divine intervention' put LUCA there (even though there is no evidence to support this), maybe LUCA arose from non-life without divine intervention. Certainly there is scientific evidence that the second option was very possible. That evidence suggests that it is very possible that those chemicals reacted in some way to form amino acids, which remain the building blocks of proteins in our own cells today. Finding out how exactly, remains the object of on-going scientific study across the world.
Dr. Charles Carter professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine who presented a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Aacademy of Sciences succintly summed up the current situation when he stated in 2015 that: "We know a lot about LUCA and we are beginning to learn about the chemistry that produced building blocks like amino acids, but between the two there is a desert of knowledge."
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