From: martinharran@gmail.com   
      
   On Thu, 17 Jul 2025 12:46:47 -0700, Kalkidas wrote:   
      
   >On 7/17/2025 11:23 AM, Martin Harran wrote:   
   >> On Thu, 17 Jul 2025 15:44:28 +1000, MarkE wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> From this recent EN article:   
   >>> https://evolutionnews.org/2025/07/new-article-from-james-tou   
   -undermines-a-pillar-of-origin-of-life-theories/   
   >>>   
   >>> 'In comparison to a protein’s half-life, the rate of polypeptide chain   
   >>> elongation under prebiotic conditions is very long. Yang et al. (2025)   
   >>> identify numerous barriers to sustained polypeptide growth, including   
   >>> the formation of non-peptide linkages and cyclic structures, stringent   
   >>> environmental requirements, and unfavorable thermodynamics. Their   
   >>> analysis establishes that the rate of growth must be far smaller than   
   >>> one added amino acid per chain per day."   
   >>>   
   >>> "Even assuming one addition each day, synthesizing a protein of 200   
   >>> amino acids would require over six months. However, the growing chain   
   >>> would almost certainly degrade in a much shorter time span. The   
   >>> challenge is even greater for RNA, which has a significantly shorter   
   >>> half-life and encounters additional chemical and structural hurdles   
   >>> during formation."   
   >>>   
   >>> Paper here: https://sciendo.com/article/10.2478/biocosmos-2025-0010   
   >>>   
   >>> No doubt this paper will be critiqued and disputed, but it is I think an   
   >>> example of the ongoing scrutiny and developing fundamental challenges to   
   >>> OoL. My prediction is these will continue to emerge, weakening   
   >>> materialistic abiogenesis and strengthening ID's core claim.   
   >>>   
   >>   
   >> You have clearly still not grasped the principle that you cannot   
   >> insist that *must have been* the butler who killed her ladyship simply   
   >> because you have shown it is very unlikely that his lordship did it.   
   >>   
   >   
   >Nature simultaneously destroys what it (allegedly) creates. And it   
   >destroys it faster than it (allegedly) creates it.   
      
   If true then that means that the Intelligent Designer gets it wrong   
   more often than he gets it right.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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