(May 11, 2014 at 5:18 pm)RDK Wrote: Someone wrote about the evolution of the mitochondria (the power-plant for the energy used in a cell) What else would a mitochondria do in a cell anyway if it was not used for managing energy. The odds of it being in the cell in the first place was only because it was needed in the first place. A simpler chance addition of something else would have meant instant death. How many possible choices could have been designed into the cell that could not work at all. What was the cell doing before it had this device, and how many uncountable atomic sized connections had to be made to invent this item before it was installed.
Randomly selected parts interchanged into an unknown combination does not make a completed part.
This thing had to be designed to the right size for it's use, as well as it's acceptance into the cell.
I know that this has got to be seeming impossible to some of you by now!
Sub-cell structures evolved with the multi-cellular organisms. They were not as finely tuned as they are today.... they must have started out much different... heck, even DNA probably didn't exist in the first living organisms.... nor RNA, but something far simpler, but still self-replicating. That's all it took: self-replication of carbohydrate sequences. How unlikely is that?