PA, I belive the "study" you posted is poor impletmentation of statistics. Basically it is bad.
I disagree that it is a poor 'implementation' what are you basing your opinion on? he uses all the variables known and needed for that random first assembly with known documented data, if you think it is bad, perhaps you can point out what he has missed and what you'd offer instead using the same scientific approach?
Ignoring the basic misrepresentations and just obvious lack of proper statistics, the "paper" concludes with:
"With all of these assumptions, we find that the probability of
assembling the RNA required for even the most primitive (12-14)
cell by random processes in the time available is no more than one
in 1079."
I'd rather you not ignore the basic misrepresentation and proper statistics, I have no reservation on abjuring conclusions reached in this paper should you actually sit down and offer a counter sound and scientific rebuttal-- further on the matter of (12-14), that would be in fact the smallest number used to have a 'functional' protein and that is actually much smaller than viruses, try to visualize the size of a virus to that of a cell and then go smaller...had you actually continued on reading ---
viruses
aren't considered living organisms by modern day standards, in other words they need a host cell to function and hijack its enzymes or 'machinery' for replication and functionality! I don't think he can go any lower than 12-14 coming in together on their own volition based on some random environmental phenomenon, and have it be realistic, and still 12-14 in and of itself still needs some other support system to enable it to thrive and survive!
He uses this of course because all the theories of early 'life forms' point to evolution from a single celled organism!
He pays lip service to "Oh my assumptions are simple" and "its so complex that it needs fine tuning", but in the end HE SAYS IT IS POSSIBLE!
So I thank the author of this paper for the thought experiment and so clearly stating it as possible that life can evolve without a creator.
Thanks.
That is not what he is saying at all...Perhaps you have skimmed over most of it? and thought we have done the same? he has covered all grounds, from the age of the earth, conditions of the sun that make life on this earth favorable, to random assembly of a simple life form all the way to a complex one, starting in the first 1.1 billion yrs using carbon dating and known fossilized elements, and in fact leaves you two or three websites
http://www.uni-muenster.de/GeoPalaeontologie/Palaeo/Palbot/seite1.html
with the earliest dated fossils which he has included in his research and further calculates the possibilites having given the earth even a few more billion yrs under its belt for a few trials and errors along the way... thus in the end it is open for you to draw your own conclusion and interpretation with the science presented, which is the most any scientist can really offer you...
You are free to challenge him on the same grounds, not merely because it doesn't appeal to you on a personal level!
cheers!