Let's imagine the moment when LIFE appears! Obviously, this is a film frame of a process, but inevitably there had to be a scene when a group, or a group of molecules, changed from inanimate to living!Several problems, questions, and doubts arise:
1. Why would inanimate matter have changed to a living state?In its previous unconscious state, it does not have•
sensory organs,• locomotor organs,• instincts,• learned knowledge,• experiences,• feeling of pain,• intentionso to surviveo to reproduceo to cooperate,o to inherit.
2. What makes inanimate matter alive?o If I assemble an exact molecular copy of a living cell, whatever it may be, will I get living matter?o If, according to scientists, the transformation of inanimate matter into living matter is a law and has happened many times on Earth, then why do laboratory attempts to create living matter collapse with a loud crash, even before the starting line?o It is very likely that no living world would have survived from a single living cell. If the origin of life took place in many places and at different times, then how can it seem that all living beings today have a single common ancestor?
3. Even the most primitive representative of living cells is a very seriously structured organism. At the moment when the first living cell appeared, this complex structure must have been available. Is this possible? Could inanimate matter have been able to repeatedly create what it most likely CANNOT create ONCE, let alone SEVERAL TIMES?
4. Its reproduction occurred by cell division. Could the primitive organization have been capable of the following tasks?SurvivalNutrition
5. The complexity of the most primitive living beings, the most primitive cells, is as follows:
This formation should have arisen in large numbers, by chance. Several times in succession.
Is it plausible?No. In fact, it is completely impossible!
This structure could not have formed by itself, by a series of coincidences, evenonce (Impossible-1) let alone many times (Impossible-2). From a chemical point of view, this would consist of quite a few consecutive or parallel steps. We can still see and know the first two or three steps of this series of steps, but we have no idea how the rest of them could have happened. (Impossible-3)
Let's assume that the molecules that are destined to live successfully carry out the series of impossible events and come to life as expected. They have plenty of problems. I don't think they have strong hands and feet. This confronts them with the task of finding a place where the water of the primeval ocean can constantly bring them new food, which they can physically come into contact with. At the same time, the end products of their metabolism must also be transported by these kind currents, preventing the accumulation of harmful substances. This is another impossible task. To make it more difficult, these would have to be maintained continuously and in a coordinated manner. (Impossible-4)