Except billions of years is a shit ton of time, primordial earth is huge, nucleic acids are a common comparatively stable product of these environments, them joining together in those conditions is not rare, and these interactions occur thousands of times a second at a scale we don't appreciate at this level.
All you need is the right order, and we're not talking a Shakespeare length play, but only a few hundred at most to get self replication.
Not only is it possible, but probable.
And that's just on earth. When you take a galaxy as large as ours, with as many planets as there are and then as many galaxies as there are, even with the most conservative estimates you might plug in for those probabilities it's near mathematically impossible for self replicating nucleic acids NOT to form, but because how life as we know it is the clear result of it one can conclude that this universe, reality and creation as we know it, exists specifically for us to be the result.
We're not talking a hundred monkeys in a room over a millennia. We're talking trillions upon trillions over a billion years each on a hundred million worlds each in a trillion galaxies.
Those metaphorical monkeys in those numbers over that timeframe are going to write Romeo and Juliet, the Bible, War and Peace, an Pi to a thousand digits. But they only have to write just one just once. If you're still pessimistic, Earth doesn't need to be here after all, Earth need only be where it happened. That's what God did, it's far more amazing, and you won't allow yourself to appreciate it just because some retard atheists told you it proves god doesn't exist for some reason.
Do I sound like someone who doesn't believe God did all we see on Earth and the universe? As I said, theoretically, with enough time, any random sequence of events could happen, given enough time (like flipping a coin a billion times in a row and having it come up heads every time), but remember, the universe is at most, 5 billion years old, correct?, so therefore, not even a fraction of the time required for the outrageous sequence of events you postulate to occur to produce life.
You're so confident but have you actually done the math and multiplied this all out? Biology is my trade, so I intrinsically understand the biochemistry going on, but do you really, really understand the insane proclivity of these interactions?
What do you know about the interactions necessary? What do you know about the speeds they occur at? What are the concentrations of the precursors, and how prevalent are they?
How large is the earth? How many stars are there in our galaxy and how many Primordial earths have existed in those 5 billion years? How many galaxies are there.
I really don't think you understand the scale you're betting against.
My challenge to you is to actually find for yourself the numbers on just a few of those factors since you clearly aren't trusting me as a source. When you start multiplying them together and get tired of counting zeros maybe you'll get it and your resistance to the idea will fall away.
Except billions of years is a shit ton of time, primordial earth is huge, nucleic acids are a common comparatively stable product of these environments, them joining together in those conditions is not rare, and these interactions occur thousands of times a second at a scale we don't appreciate at this level.
All you need is the right order, and we're not talking a Shakespeare length play, but only a few hundred at most to get self replication.
Not only is it possible, but probable.
And that's just on earth. When you take a galaxy as large as ours, with as many planets as there are and then as many galaxies as there are, even with the most conservative estimates you might plug in for those probabilities it's near mathematically impossible for self replicating nucleic acids NOT to form, but because how life as we know it is the clear result of it one can conclude that this universe, reality and creation as we know it, exists specifically for us to be the result.
We're not talking a hundred monkeys in a room over a millennia. We're talking trillions upon trillions over a billion years each on a hundred million worlds each in a trillion galaxies.
Those metaphorical monkeys in those numbers over that timeframe are going to write Romeo and Juliet, the Bible, War and Peace, an Pi to a thousand digits. But they only have to write just one just once. If you're still pessimistic, Earth doesn't need to be here after all, Earth need only be where it happened. That's what God did, it's far more amazing, and you won't allow yourself to appreciate it just because some retard atheists told you it proves god doesn't exist for some reason.
Do I sound like someone who doesn't believe God did all we see on Earth and the universe? As I said, theoretically, with enough time, any random sequence of events could happen, given enough time (like flipping a coin a billion times in a row and having it come up heads every time), but remember, the universe is at most, 5 billion years old, correct?, so therefore, not even a fraction of the time required for the outrageous sequence of events you postulate to occur to produce life.
Why? Show your math.
Why isn't 5 billion years enough?
You're so confident but have you actually done the math and multiplied this all out? Biology is my trade, so I intrinsically understand the biochemistry going on, but do you really, really understand the insane proclivity of these interactions?
What do you know about the interactions necessary? What do you know about the speeds they occur at? What are the concentrations of the precursors, and how prevalent are they?
How large is the earth? How many stars are there in our galaxy and how many Primordial earths have existed in those 5 billion years? How many galaxies are there.
I really don't think you understand the scale you're betting against.
My challenge to you is to actually find for yourself the numbers on just a few of those factors since you clearly aren't trusting me as a source. When you start multiplying them together and get tired of counting zeros maybe you'll get it and your resistance to the idea will fall away.