There’s nothing like a little exercise in statistics to brighten one’s morning…
Probability(1) of building a chain of 150 amino acids in which all linkages are peptide linkages: »1 in 1045
Probability(2) of randomly attaining only L-amino acids in a peptide chain 150 amino acids long: »1 in 1045
Probability(3) of getting a specific required amino acid at a specific required site: »1 in 20
Probability(4) of getting any particular protein 150 amino acids long: »1 in 10195
Probability(5) of randomly producing a functional protein 150 amino acids long: »1 in 1074
Probability(6) that a random 150-amino-acid compound would be a functional protein: »1 in 10164
“If we assume that a minimally complex cell needs at least 250 proteins of, on average, 150 amino acids and that the probability of producing just one such protein is 1 in 10164 as calculated above, then the probability of producing all the necessary proteins needed to service a minimally complex cell is (1 in 10164) multiplied by itelf 250 times, or 1 in 1041,000.”
– Stephen C. Meyer, PhD “Signature in the Cell” © 2009, pg 214
In light of the above, did life spontaneously generate from non-living “stuff” in the proverbial primordial soup?
Probably……..
