Can Science Explain the Origin of Life?

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Stated Clearly

Stated Clearly

Күн бұрын

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Darwin's theory of biological evolution helps us understand how simple life forms can give rise to complex lifeforms, but how did the first reproducing creatures come about? The origin of life needs its own explanation.
Scientists don't currently have a complete explanation for life's origins, but different labs around the globe are looking into the idea that life may have emerged from chemistry. In this animation you will learn why they are studying this idea, and you'll get to see a few of the fascinating things they have discovered.
Here are some links for further learning (organized by topic):
OVERVIEW OF CURRENT RESEARCH
Here David Deamer gives a wonderful overview of our current understanding of the origin of life. This hour long lecture is presented in clear language for all to follow:
• Dr. David Deamer - "Sy...
SELF-ASSEMBLY
News article on the self assembly of gene-like columns: www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02...
Video series on the self assembly of primitive cell membranes:
exploringorigins.org/fattyacid...
Video interview with chemist Jack Szostak. In it he goes over his work on self-assembling membranes and genes.
• The Origin of Life - A...
Scientific journal exploring molecules with self-assembly properties. (You need a subscription to the journal to get past the abstract)
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19...
RNA SYNTHESIS
Video on John Sutherland's production of RNA nucleotides
• Video
EARLY FOSSILS
David Attenborough explores the lives of early organisms found in the fossil record. This video explores the evolution of early organisms but does not go over the origin of the first living things.
• Video
METABOLIC PATHWAYS
This research explores a primitive metabolic pathway which could have easily formed through chemical evolution on the ancient earth (you need a subscription to the journal to get past the abstract) link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Websites for further learning:
This Interactive website outlines many of the discoveries made by life origin researchers. exploringorigins.org/
This website explains the research goals and findings of the Center for Chemical Evolution at Georgia Tech: centerforchemicalevolution.com/
CORRECTIONS:
In this animation I drew the meteorite sugars incorrectly. See this paper for accurate molecular diagrams of the sugars and sugar derivatives found in meteorites: www.pnas.org/content/113/24/E...
#chemistry #originoflife #Darwin

Пікірлер: 13 000
@jayyemm69
@jayyemm69 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine if all of life was just a game show and once we figured out the origin of life, space opens up like giant curtains and there’s just giant alien/cosmic beings clapping for us 👏🏼
@dembears95
@dembears95 3 жыл бұрын
I think you just broke me
@jayyemm69
@jayyemm69 3 жыл бұрын
@@dembears95 just something to think about 😂
@jam9235
@jam9235 3 жыл бұрын
ok, r u ready, where did the aliens come from ? thx for nothing... lol
@jayyemm69
@jayyemm69 3 жыл бұрын
@Richard Fox exactly 😂
@jayyemm69
@jayyemm69 3 жыл бұрын
@@jam9235 they were always there O_o
@tuschman168
@tuschman168 6 жыл бұрын
I lost it at "foot molecules". That really tickled me.
@seanandrews5329
@seanandrews5329 4 жыл бұрын
your mother tickled me
@niftytheundying
@niftytheundying 3 жыл бұрын
Sean Andrews ha ha ha you got the whole squad laughing
@oradoughball
@oradoughball 3 жыл бұрын
"I made pee without peeing" got me.🤣
@joannaconde5764
@joannaconde5764 3 жыл бұрын
@@seanandrews5329 LMFAOO PLSS
@aue82a
@aue82a Ай бұрын
that one knocked my socks off.
@snpio2811
@snpio2811 5 жыл бұрын
I like him honestly stating that 'science has not explained the origin of life in full detail'. It is important, as a scientist, to clarify and understand what can be explained and what cannot be explained yet. Also summarized well about the findings so far.
@MikkoRantalainen
@MikkoRantalainen Жыл бұрын
I think the two most important differences between religion and science is that: 1. It's okay to say "we don't yet know" in science. Religions are about using once guessed explanations as "knowledge". 2. When measurements show that the written "knowledge" doesn't match with the reality, the "knowledge" is fixed.
@closrod335
@closrod335 7 ай бұрын
"The more I study science," he remarked, "the more I believe in God." -Albert Einstein “Gravity explains the motions of the planets, but it cannot explain who sets the planets in motion.” -Isaac Newton “DNA is like a computer program but far, far more advanced than any software ever created.” -Bill Gates “With odds standing at 1 chance in 10164 of finding a functional protein among the possible 150-amino-acid compounds, the probability is 84 orders of magnitude (or powers of ten) smaller than the probability of finding the marked particle in the whole universe. Another way to say that is the probability of finding a functional protein by chance alone is a trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion times smaller than the odds of finding a single specified particle among all the particles in the universe.” --Stephen C. Meyer. “Another source of conviction in the existence of God, connected with the reason and not with the feelings, impresses me as having much more weight. This follows from the extreme difficulty or rather impossibility of conceiving this immense and wonderful universe, including man with his capacity of looking far backwards and far into futurity, as the result of blind chance or necessity. When thus reflecting I feel compelled to look to a First Cause having an intelligent mind in some degree analogous to that of man; and I deserve to be called a Theist.” -Charles Darwin
@FlandiddlyandersFRS
@FlandiddlyandersFRS 4 ай бұрын
_"At the molecular level, geochemistry is indistinguishable from biochemistry. Life is just ions cascading across membranes due to their electromagnetic potential._ _It really is as simple as that."_ - Professor Brian Cox
@theincarnationofboredom207
@theincarnationofboredom207 7 жыл бұрын
"i made pee without peeing" that made me laugh
@simonelampertico121
@simonelampertico121 5 жыл бұрын
????? Ajahqjqqhqq good one
@Danquebec01
@Danquebec01 4 жыл бұрын
Especially the applauding. :D
@ianmiao3788
@ianmiao3788 4 жыл бұрын
You spoiled it!
@seanandrews5329
@seanandrews5329 4 жыл бұрын
ahghaghghgahgahgahagahaghhga ok boomer
@LosloTypical
@LosloTypical 8 жыл бұрын
I love how all the people who support the fact of evolution comment show proof to hold up their statesment, while the creationist just say say, "God made the earth." Or they try to prove God exists... By using the Bible as their evidence... Seriously? Why use the Bible to show a person who doesn't believe in the Bible that the Bible is truth.
@lionelmessi8380
@lionelmessi8380 8 жыл бұрын
Bible is JUST A FUCKING BOOK THATS A FAIRY TALE. CREATIONIST FUCK OFF
@TimberWulfIsHere
@TimberWulfIsHere 8 жыл бұрын
Its like us christains pointing a sword at you, you by saying that you dont believe in our sword doesnt stop us from stabbing you with it. The bible is a historical document, not a book of science
@LosloTypical
@LosloTypical 8 жыл бұрын
Jake Forster the bible is a fairy tale, written by 40 different, racist, sexist, and homophobic men.
@TimberWulfIsHere
@TimberWulfIsHere 8 жыл бұрын
Nebiru next joke please, you just sound like a butthurt atheist with no evidence to support, since when was moses scared of gay men
@TimberWulfIsHere
@TimberWulfIsHere 8 жыл бұрын
Self Fulfilling Prophet you also forgot the 10 commandments were not even written by a human hand, its god's law on stone
@jhmejia
@jhmejia 2 жыл бұрын
Short answer: not yet! But that doesn’t mean we know nothing, we know a lot actually.
@dave1370
@dave1370 2 жыл бұрын
Right, we know enough to know that the more we learn the less we actually know, and the more unlikely naturalistic abiogenesis looks.
@chikkipop
@chikkipop Жыл бұрын
@@dave1370 Therefore Jeebus Saves! Uh-huh. Sure.
@redsusas00
@redsusas00 2 ай бұрын
@@chikkipopsounds like ur coping lol
@VaughanMcCue
@VaughanMcCue 2 ай бұрын
@@dave1370 That comment is the logic of a grade school child. If you try with a better syllogism, you might make sense.
@iloveparadise
@iloveparadise Ай бұрын
The usual empty smugness of an atheist. You people can speculate all​ you want about how life cane about, but we believers already know that "God is the source of life" @@VaughanMcCue
@marvinkitfox3386
@marvinkitfox3386 5 жыл бұрын
Extremely simplified, but containing absolutely no falsehoods or misleading pseudo-facts. i like!
@rayboish
@rayboish 5 жыл бұрын
What do you mean no falsehoods, he completely ignores the Cambrian explosion, and where the genetic information came from for species changing ie fish to mammal. Darwins theory only explains Micro evolution which we see in Natural selection . For example different types of cats, from a domestic cat to a Lion. What Darwin did say in his work The Origin of species in 1859 that eventually the fossil record will show the transition species . Here we are 160 yrs later and no transition species and we have millions of fossils. Like gives birth to like, the genetic information is just NOT THERE to jump from one species to another. If Darwin was around now he would refute his own theory.
@pbaylis1
@pbaylis1 5 жыл бұрын
You hit the nail on the head with "extremely simplified". Simplification allows you to omit vital details, like why we have found half a million fish fossils but not one single transitional form, why there are no transitional forms for plants, or why DNA cannot produce any usable new information. Why do you think Gould & Eldridge have been pulling their hair out over this for decades.
@lfidarraga
@lfidarraga 5 жыл бұрын
Theres a lot of pseudo facts. There's no evidence of spontaneous creation of self replicating molecules. The assembly of molecules like ARN are impossible to happen spontaneously.
@lfidarraga
@lfidarraga 4 жыл бұрын
@@edit8826 it's ARN in my native language
@lfidarraga
@lfidarraga 4 жыл бұрын
@@edit8826 hear*
@tadashimori
@tadashimori 9 жыл бұрын
Gosh... I wanted to read the comments to enlighten a little bit more, but it's filled with Atheist x Religion discuss...
@tadashimori
@tadashimori 9 жыл бұрын
rushy scoper After studying astronomy, my conclusions where a little bit different than yours, and maybe more depressing... There are several cases in the universe where something looks to be in perfect balance, but the truth is something called "survival bias". It was not in balance in the beginning, but it just happened that the universe got rid of everything else. If I apply it to humans and evolution, I do believe we just survived according to evolution, but this still doesn't explain the origin of life. The wish to live has to come from somewhere. After reading a little about the chemical evolution, it looks possible for cells to start randomly, but what would make it have the wish to survive? That's where I associated with the survival bias in the universe. If billions of random "fat blobs" were created, and a few of them just randomly had something inside that made them survive, or even divide for random reasons, after some time (aka million years) it could possibly have had one key mutation, making it stay existing. If all the billions of blobs died, then I'd say the "key mutation" is what we call the will to survive. I mean, even unicellular bacterias seems to have the will to survive without having a single brain cell.
@rushyscoper1651
@rushyscoper1651 9 жыл бұрын
Tadashi Mori yeah i have thought about it once. i have to say your answer is very logical we have a very similar pattern of thinking. to some level i am with u in your conclusions in why life have survival bias to add to that its even explain one of my oldest question (if survival is the key why speics fight each other instead to survival as a whole). in another hand i would say that this is my final answer but i still have one question that it don't explain why we don't live for ever like Turritopsis dohrnii instead we design to die. anyway i really like your way of thinking if u have any idea about my question feel free to share
@tadashimori
@tadashimori 9 жыл бұрын
rushy scoper Sorry, I didn't see that you replied my answer earlier. Giving a thought about the question about dying x surviving forever, indeed this question can lead to so many other questions... It's kind of a key to understand how evolution works. I was trying to find out an answer, but there's no obvious answer. Of course the general idea would be that mutations are good to experiment different patterns and find the best genetic code for the ever changing environment, one "imortal" being would not have the same capabilities to adapt. Still.. this answer is so vague I can't even consider it an answer. What lead the living beings to divide in male/female? Even more, there are living being that didn't divide at all and are still living today, so it's not a key mutation. Man... this is really interesting. I'll research more about it!
@diceman199
@diceman199 8 жыл бұрын
+rushy scoper As Tadashi said, if an organism doesn't die it also doesn't change. If you look at complex life (non singled celled forms) you'll find that they normally live long enough to reproduce and then it starts to die off. In some species that produce many young in one go (salmon for instance) it reproduces just once and dies. In other extremes where it's normal for a single offspring then the organism will normally live long enough to reproduce 4 or 5 times, possibly more, ie enough to ensure the continuation of the species. This means a shorter life span gives a more rapid "turnover" in evolutionary possibilities if you will. So any organism that does not reproduce will be out competed for resources....maybe not by it's generation but by it's competitors a few generations down the line......this is why nothing lives for ever.
@tadashimori
@tadashimori 8 жыл бұрын
They actually do. Some bacterias kind of "run away" from while cells inside our bodies. I'm aware that it's some sort of simple water concentration difference, but it clearly selected the right things to "run away" from.
@leot7
@leot7 7 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for your videos. You explain concepts very well so that they can be easily understood by everyone, yet you don't sacrifice depth when covering these topics.
@Yam-jt3vw
@Yam-jt3vw 4 жыл бұрын
reading the comment section is giving me more of a headache than taking my science quiz tomorrow.
@billy9144
@billy9144 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah so many retards here.
@studygodsword5937
@studygodsword5937 3 жыл бұрын
@@billy9144 can you believe how many people actually believe the evolution garbage ?
@billy9144
@billy9144 3 жыл бұрын
@@studygodsword5937 Evolution is a fact. LOL. www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/ Imagine being this stupid that you deny science by default in favor of unfalsifiable myth supported by no evidence whatsoever. LMFAO!!!!
@studygodsword5937
@studygodsword5937 3 жыл бұрын
@@billy9144 *5 undeniable facts* Abiogenesis is totally impossible ! Life is far to complicated to be formed by accident ! even if it did form "accidentally" what would it eat, how would it know it needed to eat, how would it have the ability to eat ! it would be the first life form ever ! How would it have developed those properties ! Please don't wast my time with that franken-life altering existing life, and calling it new life ! Or that dead stuff experiment, forming lifeless amino acids ! *your theory can't even get to evolution ! *continued !*
@studygodsword5937
@studygodsword5937 3 жыл бұрын
@@billy9144 undeniable facts #s 2,3 & 4 : *3 bridges evolution can not cross :* The first life form ever, knowing how to reproduce it's self, when it has never been done before ! going from a single cell to a complex life form that absolutely requires more than 5 organs just to survive ! going from a single sex to male and female, with all the reproductive parts working that first generation !
@ec6211
@ec6211 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. I was looking for a video like this.
@braydenbuhler4682
@braydenbuhler4682 8 жыл бұрын
I just watched an extremely well made, enjoyable and educational video. It stimulated my mind and made me think. Then I read the comments and I cried.
@Thrall079
@Thrall079 8 жыл бұрын
"Science can't explain it _yet_ so it must've been *magic*!"
@tjhookit
@tjhookit 8 жыл бұрын
+Thrall079 Meanwhile the evolutionists believe it is logical to believe that we literally came from a rock.....because the universe suddenly banged into existence, it rained heavily on the rock surface of the earth, and the chemicals leaked from the rock into the waters.....and bodabing bodaboom....life starts!
@Thrall079
@Thrall079 8 жыл бұрын
+Todd Johnson Obviously we don't have a sufficient explanation for abiogenesis... but magic is what you're going with to explain it? A being that is all-powerful, knows everything, and is capable of conscious thought and decision making? And this being cares whether you masturbate or not?
@tjhookit
@tjhookit 8 жыл бұрын
Thrall079 So you have zero idea how life started, or what MY beliefs are....but you call me "fucking retarded"? That tells me all I need to know about you.
@tjhookit
@tjhookit 8 жыл бұрын
***** Yeah you are right, waste of time.
@giveitarub7215
@giveitarub7215 8 жыл бұрын
+Todd Johnson And you believe a magical man in the sky "created himself from nothing" and spontaneously made, over 100 different standalone chemicals, millions of species, and trillions of stars in an entire universe spanning over a million light years wide, that watches EVERY persons moves all at once, and if you don't bow down to him and live by him your "soul" (somehow magically created through sexual reproduction) will suffer an eternity in a firey place and burn for all eternity. All documented in a book written and edited by Kings to their liking nearly two thousand years before science started becoming extremely advanced? Yet our heads are stuck in a ostrich's behind. Ok.
@luckychucky3426
@luckychucky3426 3 жыл бұрын
I really got to say you guys do a great job thank you for the information I so appreciate it
@riddleofthesphinx3369
@riddleofthesphinx3369 5 жыл бұрын
Great vid, visuals and a content of the vid on its own, I'll check out your profile. Man I would love to witness a creation of. The scientific theory that is proven where life come from.
@zombieslayer4415
@zombieslayer4415 10 жыл бұрын
Why isn't this stuff on Discovery Channel prime time? Oh because Amish Mafia is on then. Nevermind
@AzureFides
@AzureFides 7 жыл бұрын
I miss old Discovery channel so much ... same as "History" channel.
@ceecee685
@ceecee685 7 жыл бұрын
+fides5566 don't forget "MTV!" remember the days when they used to play music videos and have news about the music industry? yeah, me neither... ok, well barely. :/
@simoprdev3517
@simoprdev3517 6 жыл бұрын
because those claims are not proven, so they can't be said to be science. and they are not religious either. So!
@FabricioSilva-ij8iz
@FabricioSilva-ij8iz 6 жыл бұрын
Science "proves" nothing. It gives theoretical models to explain facts observed in natural world. The best model to explain biology is the Theory of Evolution.
@meis
@meis 6 жыл бұрын
It's part of the evolution. From without internet to having internet access for the masses. So those Discovery Channel, History Channel, and MTV (aka traditional TV) will or have to be phased out to some degrees. It's more convenient for the internet and smartphones. It's almost "natural selection". You discard useless "traits" to survive and adapt useful "traits" to survive. Discovery Channel, History Channel, and MTV had to change in order to adapt as well, or they will die out. Evolution and natural selection are everywhere.
@SamJac55
@SamJac55 7 жыл бұрын
Love the video. This was an area I knew little about. I've always likened the origins of life to something akin to Conway's Game of Life or some other type of cellular automate.
@clearbrain
@clearbrain 5 жыл бұрын
Very good video and explained.. Appreciated
@jackierawl6955
@jackierawl6955 2 жыл бұрын
First word you don’t know , but more are less you don’t believe, That’s that truth
@baasmans
@baasmans 9 жыл бұрын
Hell yes to this video!! The issue could be explored in more depth with hot vs cold beginning, anaerobic environment, clay matrix, the RNA world etc. but it's perfect for the intended audience. My hat off to you sir.
@DonaldKronos
@DonaldKronos 10 жыл бұрын
The answer is yes. Science CAN EXPLAIN the origin of life. Of course, scientists are still working on details of explanations of various possible origins of life, and its possible that we may never know for sure which possible origin of life was THE origin of life that actually allowed the beginnings of the evolutionary path that produced us, but whatever it was, given enough time and effort, and a sufficient opportunity to work out an explanation, science most certainly is capable of being used as a tool to do so successfully... so, yes. Science can.
@gunterra1
@gunterra1 10 жыл бұрын
You sound like a true believer. What branch of science? And who is going to do that? I have my doubts. All subjects have as their basis a point of first assumption. In man's technology this is usually weak and nonfactual. So it would be very interesting to know what that point exactly is in this case. Since you are so convinced, any idea?
@DonaldKronos
@DonaldKronos 10 жыл бұрын
Gunter Raffel Science is a process. The process is not restricted to functioning within branches.
@DonaldKronos
@DonaldKronos 10 жыл бұрын
Gunter Raffel It may be that science already has explained the origin of life here on Earth, as there are theories of abiogenesis which explain quite well how life could have gotten started on a planet like this one, and very likely how life did start on many planets much like this one, but since we can't travel back in time to see exactly how life on this planet started, we wouldn't necessarily recognize an explanation of how life on this planet started if he had one. That does not mean we can't come up with an explanation. It simply means we may not know for certain exactly when we have done so. It's a bit like if I were to foll a six sided dice a million times, and then ask you to theorize what numbers came up on the first three rolls. You know they were each in the range of one through six, so you have one chance in six of getting any one of them right in a single try, and if you guess each of those possible values once as the first number that came up, you are certain to have gotten that first number right... but on which guess? Of course, the kind of life we have on this planet tells us quite a bit about the possibilities for its origin, as do other factors such as the chemicals available on our planet to work with, the size of the planet, the distance from our local star, details about the Earth's moon, and so on. However, if life on this planet was planted here by life from somewhere else, instead of happening through abiogenesis, how would we know that? The answer is that we wouldn't know for sure unless sufficient evidence had been left behind, and that does not appear to be the case. If life had been brought here from another planet, for example, we would not expect to find something like the Cambrian explosion, UNLESS the life brought here had been si simple that the evidence left behind would likely give us no clue that life had not formed here on its own, while we would definitely expect an event of that type with abiogenesis forming primitive life, because random changes would at first have little or no distinct advantages or disadvantages, and the early structured multi-cellular life forms would have likely had too much simpler life around it to consume as food for any meaningful competition to begin. If the origin of life matched any religion's creation story, since all such stories (at least that I'm aware of) involve higher order life forms being made at about the same time which were quite different from each other, rather than evolving out of more primitive forms, we should see evidence as such in the fossil records, which we do not. Of course, it is possible that some such story is true but does not go into enough detail, for example leaving out any mention of evolution being used in the process over long time scales, but if that were the case then we should see evidence in the fossil records of life having come about in the order mentioned in such a story. Again.... we do not.
@gunterra1
@gunterra1 10 жыл бұрын
You have added nothing meaningful or new. The video presentation already said it all that is to be said. So why repeat it?
@DonaldKronos
@DonaldKronos 10 жыл бұрын
Gunter Raffel I wasn't repeating. I was answering the question. And no, the video did not say it all, nor did it actually answer the question.... so I did.
@MarboBeatz
@MarboBeatz 2 жыл бұрын
You did an excellent job of simplifying
@stxrfire4781
@stxrfire4781 2 жыл бұрын
Wow....I really love science! Evolution sounds very interesting!!!
@earthernut4073
@earthernut4073 2 жыл бұрын
Evolution indeed is very interesting! In fact, it's one of the topic containing diverse arena of subtopics which intertwine together to reveal mystery behind our existence in the universe.
@SCWoodbury2009
@SCWoodbury2009 10 жыл бұрын
This makes more sense to me than a male conservative "creator" who doesn't want us to masturbate.
@trustedlogamers
@trustedlogamers 10 жыл бұрын
he isnt male
@gunterra1
@gunterra1 10 жыл бұрын
trustedlogamers Good point. I personally prefer God to be a women. And who is to say that there is only one God. Some tell us that there are many, and even gods above the gods of universes. This makes more sense and for a much better game, for sure. If there would only be one then he/she would certainly go mad quite soon. Just imagine being The Only One. No game at all. Wouldn't that drive anyone crazy, goods included. I don't know about you guys, but I have no doubt about that. And as far as the universe (physical) is concerned, built on nothing but destructive force, I think that it is a dope head's universe. If I were to be God I and together with a few other decent fellows could have build a much better one. Don't be shy. Think about it.
@gunterra1
@gunterra1 10 жыл бұрын
***** Not really. Those men tried to explain things the best they knew then. And, quite frankly, I would also not put it past them to also be politically motivated by the 'need' to control people. As to male of female, I propose we put it to a vote. :)
@heatblaze123
@heatblaze123 10 жыл бұрын
So a process with no will or reason to create life out of no where makes more sense? Whats the origin of the meteorite? How does it come into existence?
@heatblaze123
@heatblaze123 10 жыл бұрын
***** I'm just saying we may never truly know or at least not yet.
@wooe
@wooe 8 жыл бұрын
It amazes me how some religious people almost shit their pants on the idea that there is things that we yet don't know. There is a lot of things that we don't know but when it comes to the origin of life they are so freaked out that they rather oppress and ignore what we actually know and put some sort of vague place holder deity in that spot instead. They seems to feel so much better when they don't have to think about this at all. The fact that they perhaps wasn't created specificity for some glorious purpose obviously make some people very uncomfortable, it makes them loose all that can be called being rational and logic. You are OK as you are. It's OK for you not to know everything because we have all resources to find out more about the world we live in, we have done so for a really long time now and it's working out fine. You are fully capable about making your own future and find out what suits you and what makes you happy, you don't need anyone else to do this for you.
@Mexitian
@Mexitian 6 жыл бұрын
wooe true, we can't go past what happened before the big bang or what really caused it, there are many questions about our bodies, atoms, space, etc but since we can't give proper evidence, and this is all just theory they go with some fairytale concerning someone named 'god' but yet god is also a theory and there is no evidence at all he is real, what if the bible was written to be a children's boom?
@tonydavis6151
@tonydavis6151 6 жыл бұрын
Wooe i have no problem with science, i view it as a handy tool to find the true nature of the universe. Science tells me that there are laws in nature, laws of attraction and replusion, laws of motion, laws of gravity and many many others. We are told that if any of these laws had any different values than the ones they have that galaxies, stars, planets and even matter would not have formed. All of nature exists in harmony from the smallest quark to entire universe itself and if you can't see the intelligent design in it your faith in chance is much bigger than mine is in God. The video says they can form RNA in the lab and can coax a reaction from it with iron. But they then tell you that RNA can't even live without DNA to give it instructions. When you consider the incredibly large amount of information stored in even the smallest forms of DNA, how can you believe hundreds of thousands of molecules, consisting of trillions and trillions of atoms, all came together at one instant of time by chance and in just the right order? Again, your faith has to be stronger than mine, scientifically speaking.
@edmorel134
@edmorel134 6 жыл бұрын
To sum up the video: Science doesnt know how life began. Athiests have my permission to shit themselves.
@AvatarEnd777
@AvatarEnd777 5 жыл бұрын
We are not shitting our pants. Just calling out bullshit as is our right and our responsibility. :)
@b.jamminmusic3885
@b.jamminmusic3885 5 жыл бұрын
We do know, or we wouldn't make such a fuss
@katiekat4457
@katiekat4457 5 жыл бұрын
Geez you get some big time sponsors. I’ve seen on other videos that you have a lot of the ones that make PSB NOVA. Good for you. You must be ambitious
@jIMwILLIAMS-im7kk
@jIMwILLIAMS-im7kk 5 ай бұрын
9 years later and the more science reveals the complexity of a living cell the more confounding the question becomes...darwin would have straight up thrown his random luck scenario of life into the trash bin 150 years ago had he partially comprehended the sheer complexity of the simplest living sysyem..
@CFB6855
@CFB6855 10 жыл бұрын
Nice video, simple and easy to understand. But of course one still needs and open mind to comprehend it.
@gunterra1
@gunterra1 10 жыл бұрын
Agreed.
@aweiss5206
@aweiss5206 2 жыл бұрын
An open what?
@ashtonmmton1554
@ashtonmmton1554 2 жыл бұрын
Simple and easy to understand because it's a bunch of garbage lol
@VaughanMcCue
@VaughanMcCue 2 ай бұрын
@@ashtonmmton1554 Do you have a better suggestion?
@ashtonmmton1554
@ashtonmmton1554 2 ай бұрын
@@VaughanMcCue yes a creator
@jcurtis8121
@jcurtis8121 10 жыл бұрын
My 7-year-old said, "play it again."
@Ko_kB
@Ko_kB 5 жыл бұрын
Great video. I thought they would first define what they mean by life, and probably existence and death as well.
@readchp
@readchp 11 ай бұрын
Well done video. Very clear and informative. Many thanks. From Tampa, Florida.
@ArchetypeGotoh
@ArchetypeGotoh 6 жыл бұрын
Not sure how I got to this channel, but I'm glad I found it! Simple explanations and really cool animations, well done
@muchico8600
@muchico8600 4 жыл бұрын
ArchetypeGotoh yeah that’s right
@Nicky-cc2tr
@Nicky-cc2tr 3 жыл бұрын
shutup
@corruptneedles3384
@corruptneedles3384 3 жыл бұрын
@@Nicky-cc2tr you too
@jam9235
@jam9235 3 жыл бұрын
Yep, incredibly complex structures are explained so simply. Wow and they call Christians simple minded ?
@martynjones8560
@martynjones8560 10 жыл бұрын
Excellent as always. Should have a follow-up showing the progression of prokaryotes to eukaryotes possibly via endosymbiosis. Mitochondria from heterotrophic prokaryotes and chloroplasts from autotrophic prokaryotes.
@mark41776
@mark41776 10 жыл бұрын
So those two created the eukaryote?
@martynjones8560
@martynjones8560 10 жыл бұрын
Marcus Moody It has been observed that larger prokaryotes engulf smaller unicells and instead of "digesting" them, use them for other metabolic functions. The same with plastids or small cyanobacteria. This endosymbiosis is thought to be the start of early eukaryotes. There's a lot of geological time involved here and not enough space to detail the rise of endoplastistic reticullem, ribosomes, various vesicles etc. - Find a university level text-book to argue against (Campbell's "Biology" would be my choice). There are many gradual steps on the emergence of 'true cells', but we have very good evidence of how prokaryotes became the cells that all multicellular life arose from.
@mark41776
@mark41776 10 жыл бұрын
Martyn Jones I know that they would engulf mitochondria, but an entire class of cell entirely? Interesting.
@martynjones8560
@martynjones8560 10 жыл бұрын
Marcus Moody They weren't mitochondria at that stage, just an engulfed smaller prokaryote that eventually served an energy process within the cell. Similar were indentations of the cellular membrane to give rise to other organelles, also initially redundant, but eventually useful.
@machogwapito3742
@machogwapito3742 4 жыл бұрын
This is so informative brUh, thanks
@tompalmer5986
@tompalmer5986 5 жыл бұрын
It would be a productive line of research to actually investigate if life has originated from a single source, or if life began in different environments on earth.
@39401JLB
@39401JLB 9 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, the evidence seems to indicate that life arose very quickly -- early in the geological history of Earth. That was a very, very long time ago, and much of what happened then is absolutely lost forever; even many of the rocks are gone or inaccessible.
@diabl2master
@diabl2master 8 жыл бұрын
It's quite a thought, that one single moment in which the first self-replicating molecule assembled, gave rise to everything you see before you. The device you watch this video on, the book on your table, and you yourself, it was all set into motion in that instant.
@Al-Hussainy
@Al-Hussainy 5 ай бұрын
You people are foolish
@ateam02
@ateam02 8 жыл бұрын
"I don't understand and I don't like it so it can't be true."
@giveitarub7215
@giveitarub7215 8 жыл бұрын
+Clorox Bleach Where's your proof to show that evolution isnt possible? Because you havnt been able to witness a multi-million year change in the course of your pitiful lifetime? Get the fuck out of here.
@giveitarub7215
@giveitarub7215 8 жыл бұрын
***** Show it to me please?
@giveitarub7215
@giveitarub7215 8 жыл бұрын
***** Wow that's really good evidence!! By the way that isn't evidence, it's a claim.
@anthonyrymer4391
@anthonyrymer4391 8 жыл бұрын
+Clorox Bleach If you learn about the world a little bit and all its different cultures and then also learn about the past civilizations that predate the bible and quran. You would see that humans are just gullible and ignorant creatures that'll believe in anything they been taught since a young age to explain the unexplained. There's is no designer, life just happens naturally. Scientist even proved they gotten the simplest forms of life from chemical reactions from non-living compounds.
@giveitarub7215
@giveitarub7215 8 жыл бұрын
***** Well what you said literally is no where near evidence whatsoever. "Things are sophisticated so it must be a magical invisible man who did it" Like yeah ok.
@albertmarti2718
@albertmarti2718 4 жыл бұрын
I'm rewatching this after many years since I am now taking a course on Energy and Evolution at university. After restlessly digging through the literature, I'd conclude that we will never really know for sure what the origin of life was, but I believe that we're pretty good at coming up with ideas and testing them, and that we already have quite a good idea of how it may have been, regardless of the fact that there are different schools of thought.
@Glocky131
@Glocky131 4 жыл бұрын
Holy shit, that is some really groundbreaking stuff.
@massey904
@massey904 3 жыл бұрын
Stubborn people don't really want to know the origin of life.
@SiSCrafting
@SiSCrafting 3 жыл бұрын
There is an explanation of the origin of life. Some just choose not to accept it. What I don’t understand is if evolution is true, why are humans still humans?
@debildebilov7504
@debildebilov7504 3 жыл бұрын
@@SiSCrafting You do realize that evolution is slow and gradual process right ? right now there is no evolutionary pressure for our species to change, although small changes do occur people before weren't able to digest milk but now most people can digest it , and that is all of the result of random mutations, when creatures reproduce they don't make a perfect copy of themselves something always is changed
@studygodsword5937
@studygodsword5937 3 жыл бұрын
@@debildebilov7504 evolution is an impossible process, with numerous obstacles it cannot cross !
@thallissonsousa394
@thallissonsousa394 4 жыл бұрын
Very good. Thanks researchers!
@WhiskersMctabby
@WhiskersMctabby 9 жыл бұрын
Watching this video should be mandatory if you are alive right now. I find stuff like this awesome. Every day we get closer to answering those questions about the universe and how life began. Science will someday provide us with all the answers that are out there.
@claudiaquat
@claudiaquat 10 жыл бұрын
The major take away here is when you have energy being pushed into a chemical system, that system will tend to greater complexity over time. On Earth, the energy source is the sun and the heat of the earth itself.
@carrisglen123
@carrisglen123 10 жыл бұрын
energy randomly distributed will destroy unless it has a receiver
@DonaldKronos
@DonaldKronos 10 жыл бұрын
sammy strain What? How in the world would you expect energy to destroy anything without being received?
@carrisglen123
@carrisglen123 10 жыл бұрын
Donald Kronos it needs a mechanism to utilise the energy or the mass release of energy will only be destructive . The recipient needs to be in place before the energy is released
@DonaldKronos
@DonaldKronos 10 жыл бұрын
sammy strain Absolutely not true. Just because humans have learned to take advantage of the ability to arrange things to behave in ways that we can predict, does not mean that nature needs to behave like we do in order to do anything non-destructive. You're jumping to a false conclusion. Not bad for an understanding of macroscopic mechanics as utilized by humans, but not an accurate overall picture.
@carrisglen123
@carrisglen123 10 жыл бұрын
Donald Kronos the second law of thermodynamics
@darthvader1597
@darthvader1597 4 жыл бұрын
Educational shows and great accompanying graphics.
@salvadoralvarado8685
@salvadoralvarado8685 3 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. I’m going to use it in my biology class.
@dave1370
@dave1370 2 жыл бұрын
That's pretty sad. You're a teacher, and you're showing this massive speculation as science?
@salvadoralvarado8685
@salvadoralvarado8685 2 жыл бұрын
@@dave1370 I’m going to teach that humans and chimps share more than 95% of their DNA, show me that this is a “massive” speculation
@mcmanustony
@mcmanustony Жыл бұрын
@@dave1370 it’s science. The full answer isn’t known and no one claims it is. Throwing your imaginary friends into the equation explains precisely nothing
@WCephei77HD
@WCephei77HD 10 жыл бұрын
This is awesome, I'm learning fantastic thanks to your videos, sharing them around too!
@MrGreen-fi5sg
@MrGreen-fi5sg 11 ай бұрын
No! Follow Christ!
@FlandiddlyandersFRS
@FlandiddlyandersFRS 4 ай бұрын
​@@MrGreen-fi5sg Jesus is a fictional character.
@MrGreen-fi5sg
@MrGreen-fi5sg 4 ай бұрын
@@FlandiddlyandersFRS How. Their is literally historical records of him. You people really have no argument. 😒
@FlandiddlyandersFRS
@FlandiddlyandersFRS 4 ай бұрын
@@MrGreen-fi5sg 😄 Lots of claims. But claims are not "historical records". You failed.
@MrGreen-fi5sg
@MrGreen-fi5sg 4 ай бұрын
@@FlandiddlyandersFRS If it's recorded then YES it's historical. That's what historical literally means. 😒 I failed nothing for we are close to the end times!
@cptant7610
@cptant7610 8 жыл бұрын
As an example lets say creating life requires you to throw 1000 dice and they all have to land on a six. Pretty small chance of it happening right? But what if we are allowed to throw multiple times? What if we can try a 1000 times, or a million or a trillion times? We do not even know the true extent of existence, so how can you say the chance too small for it to happen if we do not even know how often you can try? Also keep in mind that failure means there is no observer to even note the failure, since the observer is the product of life itself.
@sabin97
@sabin97 8 жыл бұрын
+CPTANT also it;s not that you need a whole strand of dna to form in a single step. the smaller components have an affinity for one another. and the even smaller components also do. so you start off with very simple small molecules. and they slowly group together, and form more complex structures, until you end up with something that resembles dna...
@cptant7610
@cptant7610 8 жыл бұрын
DNAunion Yes you are right about those odds with these particular numbers, however every chance approaches 1 as the number of attempts approaches infinity. Hell, perhaps the universe did throw 10^770 times or more. Even if that were true we wouldn't know of all the failures since we are a product of the occurrence itself. This is an extreme case aproach, I can't quantify the odds of life originating on a planet. It is meant to show that even events with the tiniest of odds will happen if we throw often enough.
@HireDeLune
@HireDeLune 8 жыл бұрын
+DNAunion What if you considered all events and all places possible- surely the chance of life approaches 100%?
@HireDeLune
@HireDeLune 8 жыл бұрын
DNAunion I'm not making a claim, simply asking a question.
@HireDeLune
@HireDeLune 8 жыл бұрын
DNAunion Considering the universe is vast, infinite maybe, wouldn't the chances of a suitable place for life approach infinite too? Even with a small chance of life, an infinite amount of planets should negate the small chance of life forming, wouldn't it? I heard somewhere that if the universe was vast enough there would be an exact copy of you. Simply because the probability approached 100% as the size and amount of matter in the universe approached infinite.
@johntaylor625
@johntaylor625 6 жыл бұрын
Everything is chemistry. that makes me think mushrooms hold more answers then we know. Since it just alters our chemistry
@andycopeland7051
@andycopeland7051 3 жыл бұрын
Yeahhhh magic mushrooooooms maaaannn
@berkaygazikara
@berkaygazikara 3 жыл бұрын
@Stated Clearly, that is an amazing video (as always) but it has been 7 years since you uploaded it, would you mind doing another video explaining the origin of life in more depth and include the work of Jeremy England about life being an inevitable consequence of thermodynamics. There aren't many videos on the internet touching that subject.
@berkaygazikara
@berkaygazikara 2 жыл бұрын
@@funquay2219 couldn't find the video buddy
@noobgamers69
@noobgamers69 7 жыл бұрын
this channel needs more subs
@Yui714
@Yui714 10 жыл бұрын
Intellectually advanced apes discuss not knowing the origin of life. Take themselves far too seriously in petty matters and not serious enough in serious matters. Life is about nothing and there's no time to learn skills, but a missing plane is the most important thing.
@carrisglen123
@carrisglen123 10 жыл бұрын
what?
@deepspacemachines
@deepspacemachines 10 жыл бұрын
That is haow a human do.
@UFOgamers
@UFOgamers 10 жыл бұрын
riding a spinning rock around a tiny star in a vast empty cosmos ..
@gunterra1
@gunterra1 10 жыл бұрын
HENNI Mohamed Just curious. What kind of rock in what universe are you riding on? My universe is not so vast really and definitely not empty. Come over and have a look.
@deepspacemachines
@deepspacemachines 10 жыл бұрын
Gunter Raffel After thorough inspection I have come to conclude that I reside in what consists of but endless stretches of nothingness, albeit the odd collection of mere particles held together by the weakest, though most unresistable force. This universe can be described as vast in a way that is barely accessible to our understanding. Furthermore its emptyness may be reckoned as the physical quality that made it possible for such a consciousness too evolve without being wiped out by a collision between any two objects in said universe. In a more philosophical manner, it can be defined by the inability of this consciousness to find other beings apart from those in its immediate surroundings. Sincerely Marrus Quinn
@sheilaclifford-smith1458
@sheilaclifford-smith1458 2 жыл бұрын
wonderful explanation. thank you.
@eshkeitt8523
@eshkeitt8523 5 жыл бұрын
Human: how did life started? *doing research to find out how* Alien/higher being: look at these chunks of atoms trying to understand how it came to be. Pathetic, complex chunks of atoms trying to understand itself, hysterical.smh
@vee9066
@vee9066 5 жыл бұрын
Lol.
@alexy.9306
@alexy.9306 4 жыл бұрын
They speak English?
@BigHeretic
@BigHeretic 4 жыл бұрын
*cellphone bwahahaha* Hilarious! look at that chunk of atoms trying to assert how it came to be and how it didn't come to be.
@callumosullivan7546
@callumosullivan7546 4 жыл бұрын
I thought that but how did the aliens come to be
@Normalguy21
@Normalguy21 4 жыл бұрын
Why aliens always think about us not about themself that how the hell the came into existence.
@haileyy2288
@haileyy2288 7 жыл бұрын
wow. i really need to study biology and chemistry because of this curious topic
@__RD14533
@__RD14533 10 жыл бұрын
I think this was a very well made video. I do think you should put links to the experiments and papers you've sited! You may have excited people's interest in this topic. You should give them credible resources to explore it on their own.
@gofiodetrigo8756
@gofiodetrigo8756 8 ай бұрын
Well done. Thanks for sharing
@deepanshug5727
@deepanshug5727 5 жыл бұрын
3:47 *"I made pee without peeing!"* 😂😂😂😂😂
@karaokeduncan
@karaokeduncan 6 жыл бұрын
I love these videos. Though in this one- the sound added alongside the dolphin is a kookaburra bird. The sound was used in the tv series and movie Flipper- and is commonly associated, incorrectly, with dolphins.
@ThisIsWEB
@ThisIsWEB 3 жыл бұрын
This could be the most important thing I have ever learned
@64jcl
@64jcl 9 жыл бұрын
That alien life form shown on the end of the video bears some striking resemblance with the Tardigrade, which is in fact an amazingly long lived creature - surviving all the past mass extinctions and can in fact survive time in space. He is a cute little thing too. :) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tardigrade
@atheistmommy3710
@atheistmommy3710 5 жыл бұрын
Very nicely done.
@kingspamaccount
@kingspamaccount 5 жыл бұрын
If you want some real science and not pretty pictures, watch this. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/leCBi8p7ksq8fWg.html
@ds525252
@ds525252 5 жыл бұрын
Excellent!! Subbing now.
@bfnv9972
@bfnv9972 6 жыл бұрын
Just a question crossed on my mind. I know that life could emerge from non-living material. And I know that free will is an illusion because my decision is based on the chemical reactions happening inside my brain. But can anybody please explain to me how can life have consciousness? Where do our mind reside? How can I experience and perceive the world as it is? I don't know if other life form beside me have consciousness at all, but can science at some point explain this to me? I'm really curious about it.
@freeyourmind7538
@freeyourmind7538 3 жыл бұрын
Damn! Probably the most interesting comment and nobody commented back. You sir/madaam/chemicals/meaningless being/ have legit questions that actually need answering.
@vivusen6547
@vivusen6547 2 жыл бұрын
Advaita Vedanta 😪
@Alphafoxx1
@Alphafoxx1 2 жыл бұрын
How can life come from material that’s not alive
@Alphafoxx1
@Alphafoxx1 2 жыл бұрын
How does organization come from chaos
@Alphafoxx1
@Alphafoxx1 2 жыл бұрын
How does the earth we live on have everything it needs to support life
@hisham031170
@hisham031170 8 жыл бұрын
+stated clearly can you post a video describing the life cycle of butterfly and explain each stage in evolutionary perspective?
@StatedClearly
@StatedClearly 8 жыл бұрын
That's not on our current list of projects but it is a good idea for an article at least. I'll see if one of my entomologist friends would have time to do a breakdown of the evolution of metamorphosis.
@ONFIREYO
@ONFIREYO 8 жыл бұрын
+Stated Clearly you should explain how the caterpillar knows how and when to build a cocoon and stay in it for a certain amount of time without ever being instructed how to do so? "the memories came in it's DNA from its parents" then why don't we get memories passed to us from our parents? and why would its ancestors ever start making cocoons? or how do birds know where to go when they migrate? how were flowers pollinated before bees existed? how did snakes spiders and other organisms that use venom randomly develop it? how does an animal randomly start producing deadly acid that it then knows how to use?
@RajSeelam
@RajSeelam 8 жыл бұрын
+Arthur Oberemok (somebodyepik) we have memories passed on to us. drop a baby in the water for example. How dose it know to hold it's breath in water. There are many more like that if u do some research.
@hisham031170
@hisham031170 8 жыл бұрын
***** So what, are we once upon a time aquatic apes or something?
@martinlag1
@martinlag1 8 жыл бұрын
+Arthur Oberemok (somebodyepik) Butterfly metamorphosis is quite well studied and understood. The cells that become wings are not fully activated until the penultimate instar (chrysalis), similar to a human chin not growing a beard until nearly two decades of life, (and never in females). Metamorphosis is explained by delayed timing of gene expression especially in climates with marked seasonal changes. There is little qualitative difference in metamorphosis and the complex mechanisms of development in embryology.
@paigea4745
@paigea4745 3 жыл бұрын
This video rocks!
@gamer__zone157
@gamer__zone157 3 жыл бұрын
Tnq for explaining brother 🔥🔥
@yunusycle1961
@yunusycle1961 10 жыл бұрын
Love your vids, they are really simple and easy to understand
@funkymonkey1958
@funkymonkey1958 2 жыл бұрын
My man could only get 7 likes in 7 years
@popcornunicorn4012
@popcornunicorn4012 7 жыл бұрын
Question on my friends test: Explain how planets are formed or create: "God made it"
@atheist535
@atheist535 5 жыл бұрын
@jia khan What made god and where is this magically enchanted beast?
@krishiyer3990
@krishiyer3990 5 жыл бұрын
A bag of chemicals experiencing itself, studying itself and growing. This chemical bag has desires, it explores art, speaks about heart, entertains itself with stories. Amazing. 😉
@toyosioyejobi309
@toyosioyejobi309 3 жыл бұрын
😭😭😅😂
@Mark-Wilson
@Mark-Wilson 3 жыл бұрын
@@toyosioyejobi309 laughing at your own ignorance?
@toyosioyejobi309
@toyosioyejobi309 3 жыл бұрын
@@Mark-Wilson No at you!
@Mark-Wilson
@Mark-Wilson 3 жыл бұрын
@@toyosioyejobi309 cus of your ignorance?
@toyosioyejobi309
@toyosioyejobi309 3 жыл бұрын
@@Mark-Wilson.
@WeirdBrainGoo
@WeirdBrainGoo 3 жыл бұрын
I like that it was stated very early in the video that we don't currently know but are trying to figure it out. I don't like it when I have to watch the whole video and then it says, so to answer the question in the title, we don't know.
@BarbarosaAlexander
@BarbarosaAlexander 7 жыл бұрын
I watch this channel with my five year old. She LOVES it. Keep up the excellent work.
@Wolfhammered
@Wolfhammered 5 жыл бұрын
BarbarosaAlexander Indoctrination starts young.
@chikkipop
@chikkipop Жыл бұрын
@@Wolfhammered Warning: Idiot on the scene
@airfun5001
@airfun5001 2 ай бұрын
@@Wolfhammeredthat would be religion, this is education
@davidbbeattie
@davidbbeattie 6 жыл бұрын
Riiiiight. Some dude recreates pee 200 years ago and starts a scientific revolution. I mean you couldn’t make that shit up could you (pardon the pun) 😂
@StatedClearly
@StatedClearly 6 жыл бұрын
Truth is stranger than fiction.
@BlacksmithTWD
@BlacksmithTWD 5 жыл бұрын
@Winston Grettum Why assume he didn't?
@edit8826
@edit8826 4 жыл бұрын
BlacksmithTWD -because this video doesn’t comport to his bible magic worldview...
@stephenmcguire7342
@stephenmcguire7342 4 жыл бұрын
@@edit8826 but is does conform with your science fiction world view, right? Well there you go your emotions say it's true therefore it must be so, right? Hope you enjoyed the cartoon.
@stephenmcguire7342
@stephenmcguire7342 4 жыл бұрын
@@edit8826 Worshipping ones Creator is not a waste of one's life. Worshipping the false gods of science fiction, which you do, and being a proud member of the Church of Scientism, which you are, that qualifies! And I'll remain angry at the lies of modern science as long as I wish, without apology!
@philiphall4805
@philiphall4805 3 жыл бұрын
as of today 6/11/2020 science has never been further away from explaining the origin of life
@Micah-kt2uw
@Micah-kt2uw 2 ай бұрын
MR. FARINA! Hello fellow Professor Dave fans 🖐🏼
@michaelportaloo1981
@michaelportaloo1981 11 күн бұрын
All two of them.
@StudioBEditing
@StudioBEditing 8 жыл бұрын
I'm currently in college and at this point I feel like I have learned quite a bit about cell biology in classes, and also just form some personal studying. I am going to be honest and say that it just seems more and more unlikely to me that life could have possibly formed at random by non-life. The more I learn about the inner-workings of cells, even the simplest of them, the harder it is to think that they could have just formed on accident. There are many, and I mean MANY, systems and basic processes that cells have that need to be in place in order for them to work, many of which are interdependent on one another. It is truly mind boggling to see how chemistry and physics work so perfectly together to allow cells to preform the processes they need to do in order to function. I feel like this video, and many other presentations like it, really over simplify how extremely difficult it is to build even simple cells, especially at random. The video mentions how basic amino acids, basic sugars and a few other molecules used in cells have been proven to form outside of life, but if you study cells deeper you can see that they are much more complex than just a bunch of these basic components put together (NOT that this video makes that claim, but I think it is only fair to point that out for people who might not know that). I guess, the point I'm getting at here is that even basic cells are extremely intricate in design, and how simple this video seems to put the origin of life just doesn't sell the idea for me. I urge everyone to read more about the inner-workings of cells elsewhere online (I say this because youtube videos are often too short and over-simplified, which is fine for its platform, however it just doesn't do much justice for this topic). From my personal experience of studying the issue it just seems almost impossible that abiogenesis could ever occur, even in very controlled conditions. Sorry for any poor grammar I know I'm clearly not an English major, but I just wanted to state my opinion. I am not trying to start a heated debate I just felt compelled try to show people that there is a much bigger picture to paint here than how this video states it.
@eepyru
@eepyru Жыл бұрын
I'm a theist, and I love studying science, and this is exactly how I feel. There is so much order, even in the most basic cells. It's like every organalle inside a cell has a purpose and it's playing its role, and whatever it does is useful to the other components of a cell in some way or the other. Without any one of the components, a cell wouldn't function. It's the order that gets me, and we know from science as well as our common sense, that order requires intelligence. Randomness and chance does not produce order and purpose. Intelligence is a great requirement, something which many people don't realise. Anyways, it's nice to see that someone else sees it the same way that I do.
@homeschooler6661
@homeschooler6661 Жыл бұрын
I've been scrolling thru the comments hoping to find one like yours. Its a pity it took so long. I wish everyone would do as you recommend. Billions of years doesn't actually aid the cause of abiogenesis. In reality it probably makes it worse. I don't see what's so threatening about considering the role of a higher intelligence. It's really the only thing that makes sense.
@stevenleibo9953
@stevenleibo9953 10 жыл бұрын
This is really helpful.. especially for those who are interested, as I am in developing more scientific literacy among people who do not formally study science. Thanks
@whynottalklikeapirat
@whynottalklikeapirat 5 жыл бұрын
I think many people fail to understand that life is not some special essence or essentially different from all other processes of matter. It's just that it is a process that matters more to most of us than water evaporating or the flow lava. It's more like if you organise matter in a certain way you get the expression of matter that we call life. There is no special "life quality" that exists unto itself on top of matter or flows through everything. In the sense that most people tend to think of it we are no more "alive" than rocks. It's all just complex processes of matter. Of course there is something unique to the phenomenon that we observe as life, in the sense that it appears to be rare - like diamonds are rare. But the things that make up you and your "life" are just stuff in flux and at some point the organisation of you begins to change and stop supporting the expression and qualities we recognise as life. The brain and body stops working in that way. But all the stuff changes and moves on and energy is transformed, contributing to the eventual heat death of the universe. I don't think anyone should feel lessened or diminished by this in any way. It is a marvelous thing - at least to us - that we exist and should exist in the way that we do and feel and think and do the things we do. It's all there. You are all there. It's just that its a all a product of prior physical processes. And when the card house falls - you fall. But there are still cards. The card house-ness of the card house was descriptive of it's organisation and experienced meaningfully as such only by you or things like you. Because in that sense we are things. Just really interesting and original and complex things, exhibiting particular qualities for a while and then others later on. At least from a human perspective.
@davidpsenko3554
@davidpsenko3554 6 жыл бұрын
we are limited for a reason, therefore theories are here for us.
@email9731
@email9731 5 жыл бұрын
Assuming that life developed entirely on Earth (i.e. didn't get kick-started by arriving on an asteroid or anything), there's a statement / series of statements that you make, which is confusing, starting around 1:25: (1) "But how did those first reproducing creatures come about?" and then a few seconds later, (2) "Furthermore, the first reproducing creature could not have developed through biological evolution, because biological evolution requires reproduction in order to work". In (2) you say "the first _creature_ ", not "creatures", which (assuming that life didn't arrive on an asteroid or something) is in vast vast likelihood nonsense - in such likelihood there _was_ no _first_ reproducing creature (given any reasonable definition of "reproducing"). (Having a first one, under the assumptions, would require some ridiculous random event of all the molecules purely randomly lining up to produce some highly complex structure, without any clear reason for it.) I think it would also be good to add a brief definition of what you mean by "biological evolution" at the beginning. For otherwise, for me, I just interpret "biological evolution" to mean what you end up meaning by "biological and chemical evolution", which makes the statement (2) confusing, until one sees that you're actually distinguishing between these things.
@adixhvv3006
@adixhvv3006 3 жыл бұрын
still more likely than a invisble man in the sky ^^
@maxbrown1990
@maxbrown1990 10 ай бұрын
What an awesome voice!
@Megsducks
@Megsducks 6 жыл бұрын
My cat loves your videos!
@luizpalombini3425
@luizpalombini3425 2 жыл бұрын
Science can explain anything if you are patient enough.
@dave1370
@dave1370 2 жыл бұрын
THAT'S not true.
@luizpalombini3425
@luizpalombini3425 2 жыл бұрын
@@dave1370 why?
@judydickey9574
@judydickey9574 7 жыл бұрын
Great video - does a good job of addressing what hasn't been explained yet as well as what we do know. The nature of science is just as important as the science itself - I'm showing this to my 10th grade biology class.
@ted73318
@ted73318 8 жыл бұрын
Nursed by warm sunbeams in primeval caves, organic life began beneath the waves, hence, without parent by spontaneous birth rise the first specks of animated earth.
@helicase2
@helicase2 8 жыл бұрын
+Simon Ring as with most who must explain origins in a materialistic and natural way, you begin in the middle with both feet planted in mid air. You glibly assume the warm sunbeams and primeval caves, the waves and even the earth as given but offer no rational explanation for their origin.
@ted73318
@ted73318 8 жыл бұрын
Poly Merase ????? It's just part of a poem by Erasmus Darwin, I thought was rather nice. It's not even supposed to be an actual explanation or argument.
@MrPlanx
@MrPlanx 8 жыл бұрын
+Poly Merase As opposed to religions that begin with an invisible deity who can create trillions of stars by magic, yet somehow his existence revolves around whether his amoeba-like creatures believe in him or not. You can't get any more hypocritical than that - or any more fucking stupid.
@FinflazodeTurroai
@FinflazodeTurroai 8 жыл бұрын
+MrPlanx WHA ?.
@MrPlanx
@MrPlanx 8 жыл бұрын
***** That's not even a word. Try again and use a full sentence.
@prasadnilugal4691
@prasadnilugal4691 5 жыл бұрын
Yes science only can explain origins of life , I believe in science only .
@zooker2185
@zooker2185 5 жыл бұрын
u are actually a descent person
@user-rb1de9gr7h
@user-rb1de9gr7h 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining sir
@doctorwebman
@doctorwebman 4 жыл бұрын
Of all the methods known to mankind, scientific methods are the most reliable, and if the origin of life is to ever be explained, science is most likely what will do so.
@raducuslav
@raducuslav 4 жыл бұрын
Imposible to prove something comes from nothing.
@doctorwebman
@doctorwebman 4 жыл бұрын
@@raducuslav Wrong. It is possible to show that something comes from nothing, and scientists have already done this by performing the Casimir experiment, which shows that virtual particles come from nothing, and it is also known that these virtual particles become real particles on event horizons of black holes. Here is a telescope image of light coming from nothing itself because of a black hole (Hawking radiation): www.sciencenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/122119_YE_1_main_1440.jpg
@doctorwebman
@doctorwebman 4 жыл бұрын
@@raducuslav You are talking about absolute nothing, which cannot exist by definition, and is therefore irrelevant to reality and discussions about origins. Scientists study the kind of nothing that can exist, which is 'empty space' that turns out to be far from empty.
@doctorwebman
@doctorwebman 4 жыл бұрын
@@raducuslav I used to think similarly, but now my morality, philosophy, and psychology makes far more sense.
@doctorwebman
@doctorwebman 4 жыл бұрын
@@raducuslav " used to be an atheist and thought of myself as a good person." In my worldview, you are a good person until you begin to do unnecessary harm to others as a habit. I assume you are a good person. "After my conversion i realised i was walking after my own lusts trying to satisfy the flesh constantly." That sounds like religious brainwashing to me, and it seems designed to make you think you are somehow evil. "he peculiar thing is that I'm still carnal, my body rules over me and I find myself in situations where the desires of my body overwhelms my knowledge of good and evil." Perhaps some medication will help with that problem. "But now there is something that makes all the diference in the world for me, this time I actually feel guilt. I had delusions of grandeour and was ready to give up on my morals for money and power (delusional but still real). Constantly lying on the job, on my friends, on my relatives, massive racist." These are things that atheists can overcome without a religion to help them. "Then something sparked, i managed to become a little bit better, guilt is consuming me so I try to avoid what Christians call sin." I became a whole lot better after I left Christianity behind. I find that Christians think that perfectly harmless activities are sins, and I disagree with them on what sin is. For me, sin is when you do unnecessary harm to others.
@lucyzombek736
@lucyzombek736 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you it helped me with a project and made learning about life so much simpler!
@atikurpranto3190
@atikurpranto3190 2 жыл бұрын
Read quran
@Rryan8065
@Rryan8065 2 жыл бұрын
@@atikurpranto3190 No it’s fake.
@atikurpranto3190
@atikurpranto3190 2 жыл бұрын
@@Rryan8065 u can read my brother
@wrldondrugs3203
@wrldondrugs3203 Жыл бұрын
that bear got drip 2:21
@husseinbulehlib6607
@husseinbulehlib6607 4 жыл бұрын
(( indeed we have created them from what they know )) old book , great vedio BTW .
@freedomofchoice460
@freedomofchoice460 8 жыл бұрын
@Dirk Remmelzwaal Most proteins are then assembled into complex molecular machines such as the polymerase and the ribosome that, in combination, perform specific tasks within the cell. This is still a loooooooooong way from a living cell. So, you see the magnitude of your faith in chance. Perhaps you should read the "old book" and see what it says before you place your faith in chance. And you might also consider which is the pseudoscience here: Intelligent Design or Random Chance. Good Luck!
@scottadler
@scottadler 7 жыл бұрын
The meaning of life is very simple. It's 42.
@27NGM
@27NGM 5 жыл бұрын
it is for to end
@javieraguirre9135
@javieraguirre9135 4 жыл бұрын
That was not the question
@baraskparas9559
@baraskparas9559 9 күн бұрын
A new book published by Austin Macauley Publishers titled From Chemistry to Life on Earth outlines abiogenesis in great detail with a solution to the evolution of the genetic code and the ribosome as well as the cell in general using 290 references, 50 illustrations and several information tables with a proposed molecular natural selection formula proposed with a worked example for ATP.
@lichking0664
@lichking0664 Жыл бұрын
my teacher loves you
@tangiiaunu2767
@tangiiaunu2767 7 жыл бұрын
Only Goku can evolve into Monkey and Ascend to Saiyan God! ULTIMATE COMBO!!! A good example of Evolution! YF KRAZY !
@NoshadCE
@NoshadCE 5 жыл бұрын
Tangiia Unu lOl Good one 😀😀
@shroomoid9403
@shroomoid9403 4 жыл бұрын
This is satire, right?
@merellemacario3594
@merellemacario3594 3 жыл бұрын
I just got here because my teacher told me to make a reaction paper about this so☹
@franzliszt8957
@franzliszt8957 3 жыл бұрын
Who cares?
@IronFreee
@IronFreee 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, understanding where we come from and learning things is so overrated... Who needs it when they when you can be a flathearther creationist or a stripper?
@tishazerin3806
@tishazerin3806 3 жыл бұрын
I love your video
@ravirajpatel4336
@ravirajpatel4336 5 жыл бұрын
Nice information
@Aluminata
@Aluminata 7 жыл бұрын
The pre-life world was largely covered in a soup of ocean; richly over saturated with chemicals, molecules, sugars and amino acids'. Life probably began as a breakdown or pressure release of interactions within this increasingly unstable, bubbling concoction across unimaginably vast tracts of time.
@TruthSurge
@TruthSurge 5 жыл бұрын
Why have you uploaded the same video with a different title?
@psyekl
@psyekl 3 жыл бұрын
please post a link to the other video.
@coltonpasnik
@coltonpasnik 5 жыл бұрын
Nice and succinct.
@DavidFMayerPhD
@DavidFMayerPhD 5 жыл бұрын
The principal gap in most concepts of the origin of life is the issue of the equilibrium between polymers and monomers. Under standard conditions, the equilibrium between proteins and amino acids moves toward complete depolyermization. The same is true of DNA and nucleotides. In other words, it is impossible for biological polymers to form without some outside source of energy. So, we must look a little further to see the key to this mystery. The key is polyphosphate. We know that, today, polymerization reactions are driven by ATP (adenosine tri-phosphate), often referred to as the "energy currency of the cell". There are three important facts concerning polyphosphate and protein or DNA synthesis: 1. Ordinary soluble phosphate is polymerized by ultraviolet light into soluble poly-phosphate. This is easily demonstrated in the laboratory. 2. When soluble poly-phosphate is added to mixtures of amino acids, the poly-phosphate forces them to combine to form the peptide bond, releasing mono-phosphate as a product for re-use. 3. This is STILL the way in which organisms create polymers of amino acids and nucleotides. The only difference is that the poly-phosphate is attached to an adenosine "handle" that permits the poly-phosphate group to be moved to the right place at the right time. In short, in the pre-biological ocean, UV radiation from sunlight (which was available in huge quantities) drove polymerization of phosphate into poly-phosphate which then drove polymerization, producing mono-phosphate to begin the cycle again.
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