46AND2
Forty six and two are just ahead of me...
- Sep 5, 2012
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Specifically how is the math missapplied?
If I have a choice of 500 amino acids and only wish to use 20 of these in a specific sequence of say 50 aminos, what is the probability that I could construct my desired sequence by pulling it blindly out of a hat?
This is easy and yields a fantastically large number revealling an equally fantastic and impossibly low probability.
(500×500×500....for 50 times, because at each point there is a 1 in 500 chance we might pick the correct amino out of the hat, this assuming that all of the corrrect aminos are present in the hat at all times).
If we find that the probability is such that the probalistic resources (number of repeats, amino acid molecules, and time available) that we have are exhausted and yet somehow we have pulled the correct sequence from the hat, what should this tell us?
What if this same event repeated a few thousand times in a row (as might be required to build a basic functionally coherent replicator)
Me? I would say that somebody had been monkeying with the hat, rigging the game somehow. A designer of some sort.
You? You would say that my suggestion is silly and that it is completely unremarkable for such improbability to be overcome repeatably over millions of years. Besides, you might say, there must surely be some law at work that magically overcomes the laws of probability and that one must just have faith that one day Scientism will discover this law and then there will be no need to think about somebody who might be playing a game we don't like.
In fact, you can even perform an "impossibly low probability" event, on purpose, right now.
Step 1: shuffle a deck of standard playing cards.
Step 2: deal all 52 cards face up, in order drawn, on the table.
That's all the steps required. Well done.
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