Every time a woman's egg is conceived some 30 million sperm cells
compete to be the lucky guy. The chance that any one will be successful
is so small, why bother making the effort. (That's why I don't play the
lottery.) Yet if conception occurs, one was successful. And whenever a
particular sperm cell wins the race it effectively beats the odds. So
it is unlikely any chosen cell will win the race to conceive, but the
likelihood is high that one will. Creationists like to say that
improbable events necessitate Godly intervention. The part they leave
out is that once life starts, and knowing that life forms evolve, over
time new creatures more adapted will come into being. The probability
is high that better adapted creatures will evolve over time given
natural selection. The probability is low that you can predict what
life forms will eventually come into being. Creationists confuse
probability with predictability.
If you drive a car for 30-40 years the likelihood is high that you will
run into somebody. That's probability. The likelihood is low that you
will know in advance who that other driver will be. That's
predictability.
Dick Fischer
Dick Fischer, Genesis Proclaimed Association
Finding Harmony in Bible, Science, and History
<http://www.genesisproclaimed.org> www.genesisproclaimed.org
-----Original Message-----
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
Behalf Of Johan Jammart
Sent: Friday, February 09, 2007 5:41 AM
To: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: [asa] Improbability of Homo Sapiens?
Quote
In 1986 the consensus among such biologists that the evolutionary path
from primitive Cambrian chordates, e.g. Pikaia, to homo sapiens was a
highly improbable event. For example, the large brains of humans have
marked adaptive disadvantages, requiring as they do an expensive
metabolism, a long gestation period, and a childhood lasting more than
25% of the average total life span. Other improbable features of humans
include:
* Being the only extant bipedal land vertebrate. Combined with an
unusual eye-hand coordination, this permits dextrous manipulations of
the physical environment with the hands;
* A vocal apparatus far more expressive than that of any other
mammal, enabling speech. Speech makes it possible for humans to interact
cooperatively, to share knowledge, and to acquire a culture;
* The capability of formulating abstractions to a degree permitting
the invention of mathematics, and the discovery of science and
technology. Keep in mind how recently humans acquired anything like
their current scientific and technological sophistication.
Few questions here that are important for my theological reflection (as
it is my domain of interest) as it seem that the evolution to homo
sapiens seems improbable.
What if homo sapiens did not arise from evolution?
1) Is other form of intelligent life (like human intelligence)
improbable with the evolution?
2) Is the evolution of humanoids improbable?
3) How could God knew that evolution would bring creature that will be
able to have relationship with Him? Of course He is omniscient but in
His omniscience He had to choose a process that would bring intelligent
life.
Blessings,
Johan
To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with "unsubscribe
asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.
To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with
"unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.
Received on Fri Feb 9 12:25:53 2007
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Fri Feb 09 2007 - 12:25:54 EST