ArticlePDF Available

Evolution of First Life without Oparin (Primordial Soup) Theory of Evolution: a Critical Review

Authors:

Abstract

Oparin theory (also known as Oparin- Handle theory) states that the first life was formed by a series of chance actions in the ocean and appears to have been the ancestor of the primitive cell- the first form of life. Currently this theory is known as the most modern and naturalistic theory about origin of the first life. Organic compounds are still present in huge amount in this planet, so life could be generated to it, and newer species of unicellular organisms could be produced frequently. But it is not happening at all. Modern cell theory, principle of biogenesis and Vitalism does not agree with Oparin theory at all. World renowned classical scientists such as Francesco Reddi, Antony Van Leauwenhok, Abbe Spallazani and Loius Pasteur were proved by different experiments that life does not come spontaneously from organic matter or any other sources, and a life only comes from a life. If Oparin theory be right then the classical experiments about the abiogenesis of the above scientists will be proved as wrong, as well as they become as nonscientist; but nobody will admit this. Recent theory of Nick lane (origin o of life at a special kind of deep-sea hydrothermal vent) and Helen Hansma (possible origin of life between mica sheets) opposed Oparin theory. Father’s of modern evolutionary theories such as Buffon, Lamarck and Darwin believed that life was first breathed by the Creator
1. Introduction
Mankind, who does not believe on special creation theory, has
long sought to learn when and where life was originated. Fur-
thermore, they investigated the ways through which enormous
kinds of animals and plants have come into life form. They
also proposed various theories on the origin and evolution of
life on the earth surface and tried to put evidences in support
of their theories. In 1924, the Russian biologist A. I. Oparin
published in Moscow a short monograph entitled ‘The Origin
of Life’ (Parves and Orians, 1987). Five years later (in 1929)
J. B. S. Haldane also arrived at the same idea independently
(Campbell, 1996). The theory is thus also known as Oparin-
Haldane theory of origin of life. Oparin theory argues that life
was evolved from organic chemicals (H2O, CH4, and NH3)
in the primitive seas at the time when earth atmosphere was
free from oxygen (Gerking, 1974; Verma and Agarwal, 1999).
The rst cells were formed by a series of chance actions. The
primordial atmosphere of the earth had water, methane, and
ammonia. These compounds tended to be washed out by the
driving rainwater, collected in the oceans and appear to have
been the ancestor of the primitive cell—the rst form of life
(Raven et al., 1980) and UV radiation provided the energy to
convert methane, ammonia and water into the rst organic com-
pounds in the oceans of the early earth (Lane et al., 2010). It is
declared that from this simpler organism, all species of living
organisms have been evolved through gradual changes over
vast period of time. Even human beings, like all other plants
and animals, have been evolved from this simpler organism
(Buffaloe, 1963; WBES, 1994).
Oparin sometimes is called ‘Darwin of the 20th century’ (Wiki-
pedia, 2010) and currently this theory is known as the most
modern and naturalistic theory about origin of the rst life
on earth (Storer et al., 1980). Supporting this theory in 1953,
two American chemists Stanley Miller and Harold Urey at
the University of Chicago produced amino acids by chemical
synthesis using Miller apparatus. An electric current was passed
through a mixture of methane, ammonia, hydrogen and water
and showed that some amino acids could be synthesized from
ammonia and methane. So, the idea of spontaneous origin
of life gained scientic acceptability. The experiment is now
famous and the theory still prevails today (Chadwick, 2005;
Young, 2006). The result of this experiment and many other
similar tests support the Oparin’s hypothesis, as it produces
the biologically important molecule like amino acid (Bern-
stein and Bernstein, 1982). As a result, most biologists agree
General5-9
IJbSM 2(1) MARCH 2011 005
Evoluon of First Life without Oparin (Primordial Soup) Theory of Evoluon: a Crical Review
Md. Abdul Ahad*
Department of Entomology, Hajee Mohammad Danesh Science and Technology University, Dinajpur (5200), Bangladesh
© 2011 PP House. All rights reserved
Abstract
Article History
Correspondence to
Keywords
Manuscript No. 77
Received in 23rd October, 2010
Received in revised form 23rd January, 2011
Accepted in nal form 3rd February, 2011
Oparin theory (also known as Oparin- Handle theory) states that the rst life was
formed by a series of chance actions in the ocean and appears to have been the ancestor
of the primitive cell- the rst form of life. Currently this theory is known as the most
modern and naturalistic theory about origin of the rst life. Organic compounds are
still present in huge amount in this planet, so life could be generated to it, and newer
species of unicellular organisms could be produced frequently. But it is not happening
at all. Modern cell theory, principle of biogenesis and Vitalism does not agree with
Oparin theory at all. World renowned classical scientists such as Francesco Reddi,
Antony Van Leauwenhok, Abbe Spallazani and Loius Pasteur were proved by different
experiments that life does not come spontaneously from organic matter or any other
sources, and a life only comes from a life. If Oparin theory be right then the classical
experiments about the abiogenesis of the above scientists will be proved as wrong,
as well as they become as nonscientist; but nobody will admit this. Recent theory of
Nick lane (origin o of life at a special kind of deep-sea hydrothermal vent) and Helen
Hansma (possible origin of life between mica sheets) opposed Oparin theory. Father’s
of modern evolutionary theories such as Buffon, Lamarck and Darwin believed that
life was rst breathed by the Creator.
*E-mail: aahad_hstu@yahoo.com
Oparin theory, evolution, without, rst
life, review
77
that early form of life arose naturally from non-living matter
(Simpson and Beck, 1969; Hickman, 1970). But there are
also opposition group and they do not believe this theory. Nick
Lane (University College London) drew attention that rst life
arose from gases (H2, CO2, N2, and H2S) and the energy came
from tied together geochemical gradients created by mother
earth at a special kind of deep-sea hydrothermal vent (Lane et
al., 2010). Moreover, Helen Hansma (University of California,
Santa Barbara) stated that mica sheets might be a good place
for the origins of rst life. The energy needed for life to evolve
from non-living molecules might have come simply from the
sun and the waves (Hansma, 2010). These two recent theories
do not support Oparin theory. Graham (1986) questioned that as
the same ingredients, which made the rst life are still existing;
why they cannot produce any life again and again? Lapointe
(1995) pointed out that evolutionists conrmed that life resulted
from non-life, and matter resulted from nothing, each of these
is an impossibility of science and the natural world, and even
common sense cannot account for it.
Therefore, it is necessary to remove this contradiction for the
cause of biological science. But a review of literatures reveals
that such type of work is scanty in the world. This paper
would give a clear and elaborate idea about Oparin’s theory,
its weakness as well as its optimistic side, and would come to
a conclusion whether the theory is correct or not.
2. Impossibility of Arising of a New One-celled Organism
through Abiogenesis
Organic compounds are still present in huge amount in this
planet, so life could be generated from that and newer species
of unicellular organisms could be produced frequently. But
it is not happening at all. World renowned three American
geneticists (E. D. Sinnott, L. C. Dunn, and T. Dobzhanskey
(one of the originators of modern synthetic theory) drew at-
tention in their ‘Principles of Genetics’ (5th Edn.) that a living
individual always arises from another living individual of the
same species and never from another species or from lifeless
matter (Sinnot et al., 1998).
Furthermore, living organisms are mainly composed of 21
elements with varying percentages such as C-0.03, H-0.10,
N-trace, O-46.06, P-0.10, S-0.05, Na-2.90, Mg-2.10, Cl-0.05,
K-2.60, Ca-3.60, Fe-5.00, etc. (Wallace, 1990). Spontaneous
chemical evolution of one-celled organism in the primitive sea
means that naturally occurring 21 scattered elements would
had to mix in the same place in appropriate percentage. More-
over, not only these 21 elements simultaneously need to come
together in precise sequence but also have to form appropri-
ate amount of protein (71%), carbohydrate (5%), lipid (12%)
and nucleic acid (7%) with their specic components such as
amino acid, fatty acid, glycerol, etc. with a proper sequence by
different bonds as found in protein, carbohydrate and nucleic
acid of different living organisms.
Ranganathan (1988) pointed out that survival of a cell needs
all its basic organelles (parts) with their various functions.
Therefore, if a cell had to evolve, it means that numerous parts
would have had to come into survival at the same time, in the
same place, and then simultaneously come together in a precise
order. According to Meyer (2003), Oparin assumed that in the
early atmosphere there was no free oxygen. But geochemical
studies showed that signicant amount of free oxygen was also
present there. World renowned classical scientists Francesco
Reddi (1623-1698), Antony van Leauwenhok (1632-1723),
Abbe Spallazani (1729-1794) and Loius Pasteur (1822-1895)
proved by different experiments that life does not come from
organic matter or any other sources spontaneously, and a life
only comes from life (Cockrum and McCauley, 1965; Kimball,
1974; Purves and Orians, 1987). If Oparin theory be right then
the classical experiments of these world renowned scientists
will be proved as wrong, and will be considered as unscientic;
but nobody would admit this.
Furthermore, many biologists consider Oparin theory as a
hypothesis. Such as Bernstein and Bernstein (1982) cited this
theory as a hypothesis in his book ‘Biology: the Study of Life’.
Besides these, if the rst cell was a prokaryotic why does single
microorganism, e.g. bacteria, which were evolved about 3.5
million years ago, exist as prokaryotic, and did not evolve into
another animal?
3. How the Miller Experiments Support Oparin Theory?
The evolutionary scientists claim that evolution of life from
organic compound is right, as Miller (1953) was able to produce
amino acid, the basic molecule of any life, through Miller ap-
paratus. But is it possible under natural condition? Again, they
are successful to produce amino acid only, but still biologists
are unable to produce a one-celled organism like protozoa or
bacteria. Even they are unable to produce a single molecule
of carbohydrate. The themes of evolutionists are such that all
were possible during that time but it is quite impossible now.
Purves and Orians (1987) asked why in nature, a cell cannot
simply be formed by a combination of its organelles, nor has
such a chance of synthesis could be achieved in a laboratory.
This situation raises the important question, i.e. where did the
rst cell come from?
4. Chemical and Biochemical Impossibility of Chemical
Evolution
According to the Oparin theory, the primitive seas must have
accumulated a thick solution—soup of organic molecules. But
IJBSM 2(1) MARCH 2011
006
recent calculations suggest that organic content of the primi-
tive seas could have been 10% only (Case, 1979). Likewise,
Meyer (2003) drew attention that in recent years this theory
has severe, even fatal criticisms such as i) geochemists have
failed to nd any evidence of the nitrogen-rich ‘pro-biotic soup’
required for Oparin model; ii) new geological and geochemi-
cal evidences suggest that pro-biotic atmospheric conditions
were antagonistic to the production of amino acids and other
essential elements of life. Vuletic (2003) pointed out that
nucleic acids could not replicate without the help of proteins.
Protein, however, cannot be formed unless specied by nucleic
acid sequences. Thus, genetic systems naturally could not have
started. He also pointed out that in nature, equal amounts of
left-handed and right-handed amino acids are formed. So, one
would expect it to occur in equal proportions in living organ-
isms, if abiogenesis were true. But surprisingly all the amino
acids in living organisms are left-handed!
5. Mathematical Impossibility of Spontaneous Origin of
First Life
The Swiss mathematician Eugene Gai calculated that the pos-
sibility of naturally occurring C, H, N and O2 to mix together
forming a protein molecule has the probability of 1/16000
(Monsma, 1958); which is tiny enough, so may be ignored.
The biologist Lecomte du Nouy calculated in his book ‘Human
Destiny’ that according to the laws of probability, the emer-
gences of living organisms from inorganic molecule would
have been less than one in a hundred billion, which is too
small and may be ignored. He furthermore noticed that there
were no experimental evidences to support the Oparin theory
(Christian, 1977).
As well, there is n! (n factorial) ways of an enzyme (or DNA
strand) of n parts to form pro-biotically. Since the smallest
proteins have at least 100 amino acids, the chance of forming
a particular enzyme pro-biotically is at most 1/100, which is
little enough and so may be disregarded (Meyer, 2003). Mayer
(2003) supplemented that scientists not known for a loyal as-
surance to materialistic philosophy now admit that materialistic
science in no way be sufcient to explain the origin of life.
6. Controversy between Cell Theory and Oparin Theory
The cell theory is one of the greatest foundations of biology
(Simpson and Beck, 1969). It still remains as a very important
concept (Gupta, 1997). According to cell theory, a cell comes
only from a pre-existing cell; on the other hand, Oparin theory
declared that the rst cell was evolved from organic chemi-
cals (H2O, CH4, and NH3) in the primitive seas. So, Oparin
theory violates the universally accepted ‘cell theory’ as stated
hereunder.
According to the law of cell theory put forward by the Ger-
man physician, anthropologist and father of modern pathology
Roudolf Virchow, a cell comes only from a cell, which is the
basic theory of modern biology (McElory et al., 1975).
Starr and Taggart (1989) and Gupta (1997) drew attention that
all new cells arise only from pre-existing cells.
Nobel laureate Watson (1977) pointed out that cell theory is the
second great principle of biology of the 19th century and this is
universally accepted. This theory explains that all cells come
from pre-existing cells (Omonia cellula e cellula). Comparable
judgments have also been forwarded by Wallace (1990), and
Sinha and Sinha (1997).
So, cell theory does not support Oparin theory.
7. Contradiction between Principle of Biogenesis and Oparin
Theory
According to the law of biogenesis, a life only comes from life. It
is commonly understood that new organism whether a simple or
complex one comes from concerned parents (Buffaloe, 1963).
Two American geneticists Brewer and Sing (1983) conformed
that life comes only from pre-existing life.
Oparin theory, of course, is unproven and an improvable as-
sumption. The probability of life originating from non-living
matter through a chemical evolution by an accident is compa-
rable to the complete dictionary resulting from an explosion
(blast) in a printing supermarket (Ranganathan, 1988).
World-renowned geneticist Strickberger (1996) drew attention
that the birth of new organisms arises only through the continu-
ity of life. He quoted the words of Pasteur, ‘Every living thing
comes from a living thing’ (Omne vivum e vivo).
Vuletic (2003) acknowledged that the law of biogenesis is
universal but Oparin theory does not obey this major law of
biological science.
8. Contradiction between Modern Evolutionary Theory
and Oparin Theory
Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon (1707-1788), the father
of evolution, originally believed that all organisms had been
especially created for different ways of life (Starr and Taggart,
1989; Wallace, 1990; Purves and Orians, 1987).
Lamarck also believed the same opinion. According to him,
life had been created in the past in a simple state (Starr and
Taggart, 1989).
Darwin too did not believe about the arising of the rst life from
organic compounds. In the words of Darwin,I should infer from
analogy that probably all the organic beings, which have ever
lived on the earth, have descended from someone primordial
form, into which life was rst breathed by the Creator(Darwin,
1859). ‘There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several
IJbSM 2(1) MARCH 2011 007
powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a
few forms or into one’ (Darwin, 1859).
9. Contradiction between Vitalism and Oparin Theory
The idea of vitalism is that life has a unique spiritual property
that is quite distinct from those ascribed (attributed) by chemical
and physical laws (Wallace, 1990).
Today, we take for granted the ‘common sense’ approach of the
scientic method and the validity of cause-and-effect reasoning.
During Darwin’s time, however, this was not the case. Biologists
were divided over two philosophies of living processes, which
we now call vitalism and mechanism. Vitalism is the philosophy
of life that views life processes as depending for their efciency
upon forces that exist in addition to physical and chemical ones.
Mechanism, in contrast, views life processes as depending ex-
clusively upon physical and chemical principles. For example,
suppose a question were to arise over why the pancreas of a
higher animal body secretes pancreatic juice at exactly the right
time in the digestive process. Assuming that neither knows the
answer, the vitalist might answer, ‘It secretes its product because
it is supposed to’. The mechanist however, would probably say,
‘I don’t know, but I believe that there is an answer which can
be understood in terms of physics and chemistry. Now which
of these answers is the satisfactory? Vitalist’s answer implies
that the pancreas possesses built-in intelligent or that has been
set in an operation directly by supernatural force and his answer
is a dead end; it will never lead him any closer to solving the
problem. Although the mechanist is obliged to confess ignorance
in this case, his is the answer that leads to a hypothesis and hence
to investigation of the problem’ (Buffaloe, 1963).
Scientists still cannot say exactly what life is and how it began
(Wallace, 1990). It implies that scientists still do not believe
Oparin theory as well as any other theory of evolution of rst
life.
10. Contradiction between the Law of Thermodynamics
and Oparin Theory
The second law of thermodynamics rules out abiogenesis.
This law states that disorder in the universe always increases;
therefore the universe could not have started in an ordered state
unless it was ‘wounded up’ by a Creator. For life come into
existence spontaneously would be like a whirlwind blowing
through a junkyard assembling the loose parts into a functioning
pickup truck (Vuletic, 2003).
Despite bioenergetics and thermodynamics rejecting the 81-
year-old concept of primordial soup (Oparin theory) it remains
central to mainstream thinking on the origin of life’, Opined
William Martin, an evolutionary biologist from the Institute of
Botany in Düsseldorf. He also stated that soup has no capac-
ity for producing the energy vital for life (Lane et al., 2010).
It has also been testimonied that thermodynamic constraints
mean chemiosmosis is strictly necessary for carbon and energy
metabolism in all organisms that grow from simple chemical
ingredients (autotrophy), today, and presumably the rst free-
living cells. They questioned that how the earliest cells might
have bound a geochemically created force and then learned to
make their own? (Lane et al., 2010).
11. Nick Lane and Helen Hansma Theory Oppose Oparin
Theory
Lane et al. (2010) drew attention that new research rejects 80-
year-old theory of Primordial Soup (Oparin theory) as the origin
of life. They pointed out that early life began in a ‘primordial
soup’ of organic molecules (Oparin theory) but today the ‘soup’
theory has been over turned in their pioneering paper in BioEs-
says. They claimed that it was the earth’s chemical energy, from
hydrothermal vents on the ocean oor, which kick-started early
life. Lane and his team provided this new perspective as the old
and familiar view (Oparin theory) would not work at all. They
mentioned that life arose from gases (H2, CO2, N2, and H2S)
and the energy came from tied together geochemical gradients
created by mother earth at a special kind of deep-sea at alkaline
hydrothermal vent. Lane concluded that it is far from being too
complex to have powered early life, it is nearly impossible to
see how life could have begun without chemiosmosis. It is time
to cast off the shackles of fermentation in some primordial soup
as ‘life without oxygen’ (Lane et al., 2010).
Besides this, Hansma (2010) refused Oparin theory and opined
that mica sheets might be a good place for the origin of life that
can move up and down in response to owing water, which
could have provided the mechanical energy for making and
breaking chemical bonds. The energy needed for life to evolve
from non-living molecules might have come simply from the
sun and the waves (Hansma, 2010).
Mader (1997) point out that the transformation of non-living
matter into living matter still astonishes and challenges inves-
tigators.
Castro and Hubner (1997) conrmed that any theory might
overturn at any time by new evidence. So, Oparin theory of
evolution might be rethought.
12. Conclusion
Oparin theory, Nick Lane theory and Helen Hansma theory
about origin of rst life reject each other. However, modern cell
theory, principle of biogenesis, Vitalism and law of thermody-
namics does not agree with Oparin theory at all. Even fathers
of modern evolutionary theories such as Buffon, Lamarck and
Darwin believed that life was rst breathed by the Creator.
Furthermore, so many weaknesses of ‘Oparin theory’ and other
IJBSM 2(1) MARCH 2011
008
theories showed that the life must be created by the Creator.
12. References
Bernstein, R., Bernstein, S., 1982. Biology: The Study of Life.
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Inc., Philadelphia.
Brewer, G.J., Sing, C.F., 1983. Genetics. Addison-Wesley
Publishing Co., London.
Buffaloe, N.D., 1963. Principles of Biology. Prentice Hall Inc.,
Englewood, Cliffs, New Jersey.
Case, J.F., 1979. Biology (2nd Edn.). Macmillan Publishing
Co. Inc., New York and Collier Macmillan Publishers,
London.
Campbell, N.A., 1996. Biology (4th Edn.). The Benjamin Cumin
Publishing Co. Inc., Melono Park, California.
Castro, P., Hubner, M.E., 1997. Marine Biology (2nd Edn.).
WCB/McGraw-Hill, New York.
Chadwick, A.V., 2005. Abiogenic origin of life: a theory in
crisis. www.origin.swau.edu/papers/life/Chadwick/de-
fault.html.
Christian, J.L., 1977. Philosophy: an Introduction to the Art of
Wandering (2nd Edn.). Halt, Rinchart and Wiston, Texas.
Cockrum, E.L., McCauley, W.J., 1965. Zoology (Saunders
Student Edn.). W.B. Saunders Co., London.
Darwin, C., 1859. The Origin of Species. Oxford University
Press, London.
Graham, K., 1986. Biology Pensacola. A Beka Book Publica-
tion, Florida.
Gupta, P.K., 1997. Cytology, Genetics and Evolution (5th Edn.).
Rastogi Publications, Meerut, India.
Gerking, S.D., 1974. Biological Systems (2nd Edn.). W. B.
Saunders Co., Philadelphia.
Hickman, C.P., 1970. Integrated Principles of Zoology (4th Edn.).
The C.V. Mosby Co., Saint Lois.
Haldane, J. B. S. 1929. The origin of life. Rationalist Annual
3: 3–10.
Hansma, H.G., 2010. Possible origin of life between mica sheets.
ScienceDaily (Aug. 6, 2010) Journal of Theoretical Biol-
ogy 266 (1): 175 DOI:10.1016/j.jtbi.2010.06.016.
Kimball, J.W., 1974. Biology (3rd Edn.). Ameind Publishing
Co. Pvt. Ltd., New York.
Lapointe, D., 1995. Top evidence against the theory of evolu-
tion. www.freeessays.cc/bd/41sff262.html.
Lane, N, Allen, J. F. Martin, W. 2010. How did LUCA make
a living? Chemiosis in the origin of life. BioEssays
(Wiley Periodicals, Inc.) 9999:1-10(www.nick-lane.net/
LAM%2520BioEssays.pdf) and (www.sciencedaily.com/
releases/2010/02).
Mader, S., 1997. Inquiry into Life. Wm. C. Brown Publishers,
England.
McElory, W.D., Swanson, C.P., Macey, R.I., 1975. Biology
and Man. Prentice-Hall Inc., Englewood Cliffs, New
Jersey.
Meyer, S.C., 2003. DNA by design: an inference to the best
explanation for the origin of biological information.
Whitworth College, Spokane, Washingtong D.C. www.
stephenmeyer.org.
Miller, S.L., 1953. A production of aminoacid under primitive
condition. Science 117(52), 528-529.
Monsma, J.C., 1958. The Evidence of God in the Expanding
Universe. G.P. Putnam’s Sons, New York.
Oparin, A. I.1924. Proiskhozhozhdenie zhizny, Moscow (Trans-
lated by Ann Synge in Bernal (1967)), The Origin of Life,
Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, 199–234.
Purves, W.K., Orians, G.H., 1987. The Science of Biology (2nd
Edn.). Sinauer Associates Inc. Publishers, Sunderland,
Massachusetts.
Ranganathan, B.G., 1988. Origins? The Banner of Truth Trust,
Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
Raven, P.H., Evert, R.F., Curtis, H., 1980. Biology of Plants
(2nd Edn.). Worth Publishers Inc., New York.
Simpson, G.G., Beck, W.S., 1969. Life: an Introduction to Biol-
ogy. Harcourt Brace and World Inc., Philadelphia.
Sinha, U., Sinha, S., 1997. Cytogenetics, Plant Breeding
and Evolution. Vikas Publishing House Pvt. Ltd., New
Delhi.
Sinnott, E.D., Dunn, L.C., Dobzhanskey, T., 1998. Principles
of Genetics (5th Edn.). Tata-McGraw-Hill Publishing Co.
Ltd., New Delhi.
Starr, C., Taggart, R., 1989. Biology: the Unity and Diversity
of Life (5th Edn.). Wardsworth Publishing Co., Belmonte,
California.
Storer, T.I., Usinger, R.L., Stebbin, R.C., Nybakken, J.W., 1980.
General Biology (6th Edn.). Tata McGraw Hill Publishing
Co., New Delhi.
Strickberger, W.M., 1996. Genetics (3rd Edn.). Prentice Hall of
India Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.
Verma, P.S., Agarwal, V.K., 1999. Cell Biology, Genetics,
Molecular Biology, Evolution and Ecology (13th Edn.).
S. Chand and Co. Ltd., New Delhi.
Vuletic, M.I., 2003. Frequently encountered criticisms in
evolution vs. creation. (www.vuletic.com/hume/cefec/).
Wallace, R.A., 1990. Biology: the World of Life (5th Edn.).
Harper Collins Publishers Inc., New York.
Watson, J.D., 1977. Molecular Biology of the Gene. W.A.
Benjamin Inc., Melono Park, California.
WBES, 1994. Men and Women in Science, Index. The World
Book of Encyclopedia of Science, Vol. 8. World Book
Inc., Chicago.
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 2010. The Theory of Origin
of Life (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander _Oparin).
Young, A., 2006. An interesting theory? (ww.strellis.com/SAS/
articles/panspermia/panspermia.html).
IJbSM 2(1) MARCH 2011 009
... Additionally, Wainwright (2010) declared that the origin of species without Darwin-Wallace Theory. Ahad drew attention that evolution of first life without Oparin theory (Ahad 2011), molecular evolution of new species without neo-Darwinism/ modern synthetic theory (Ahad, 2011a) and evolution without Lamarck's theory (Ahad 2011b) and it is proved that the direct evidences (Paleontology/ fossils) of evolution opposite to Darwin's Theory and even Opposite to human evolution (Descent of Man) from the lower animal like chimpanzee (Ahad 2015). But review of literature reveals that there is no work on 'artificial selection/hybridization (the main fore of evolution) opposite to Darwin's theory and also opposite to macroevolution through chromosomal aberration/ chromosomal number mutation. ...
Article
Full-text available
Darwin’s theory of evolution is the central theme of biology and also key element of modern synthetic theory (neo-Darwinism) and Sociobiology. Darwin and his followers declare that artificial selection/ hybridization produce new species and provide a model of natural selection sexual selection (human evolution). Artificial selection is a skilled sexual selection. Moreover gene flow, recombination, chromosomal aberration/ chromosome number mutation (macroevolution/ polyploidization) also occur very smoothly and skillfully through artificial selection. But it is clear that breeding (hybridization) between two plants species or animal species is not possible either naturally or artificially; if imposed the fertilization fails, if the fertilization is successful, the embryo may abort, or the young may suffers various abnormalities and at last it may die, if the hybrid survives to maturity, it must be sterile, if fertile it produces varieties/ races. So, breeders have developed some plants and animals varieties through hybridization between two varieties. For instance, through hybridization between two rice varieties, breeders have developed some rice varieties such as IR-8, IR-28 etc. but these varieties are lost their genotype just after a few generations. So, chromosomal speciation/ macroevolution/ polyploidy is also impossible. Moreover, cloning (biotechnology/ genetic engineering) neither produces a new species nor produce a new variety, as it produces many identical copies. So, it is confirmed that artificial selection/hybridization (the main fore of evolution) opposite to Darwin’s theory and also opposite to macroevolution through chromosomal aberration/ chromosomal number mutation.
... They again declared that so long as diverging races are not yet reproductively isolated, they are potentially able to hybridize and merge back into a single population. Human races are an excellent example of such merging process (Sinnott et al., 1998;Ahad, (2011). The famous geneticists Brewer and Sing (1983) and Strickberger (1996) have also given the same opinion. ...
Article
Full-text available
The modern synthetic theory (neo-Darwinism) is an extension of Darwinian Theory of evolution. It is a combination of mutations and natural selection. Both Darwinian and synthetic theory are based on mutation and population genetics. This theory is accepted by the most biologists. It advocates that molecular evolution occurs through the changes of gene structure or frequency via the agents of this theory especially by mutation. But mutations are random changes of DNA. Most mutations are homozygous recessive and harmful. It inhibits metabolic processes and produces dangerous diseases as well as opposed molecular evolution of new species. If accidentally possible (either naturally or artificially), this change is might be within the species and form variety (or race or strain). But aquirring of status of this variety to a species is less possible due to segregation and failure to gain reproductive isolation.
Article
Full-text available
El objetivo de esta investigación consiste en evaluar de forma sucinta las principales teorías del origen de la vida y proponer razones puntuales para considerar el relato bíblico como una alternativa confiable respecto a los orígenes. La investigación tiene un enfoque cualitativo de carácter descriptivo. Para la recolección de datos se emplea la técnica de fichaje bibliográfico, que permite organizar el estado del arte de las teorías del origen de la vida y del relato del Génesis. Diversos autores y líneas investigativas enlistan características que se relacionan con la aparición de la vida, pero no existe una definición clara de vida en la comunidad científica. Las teorías del mundo del RNA, la panspermia, y las membranas prebiológicas abordan el origen de la vida desde un enfoque abiogénico, gradualista y evolutivo. Por otro lado, en la protología del Antiguo Cercano Oriente se encuentra el relato del Génesis bíblico como una narrativa histórica, secuencial y amítica, que tiene características diferenciadoras respecto a las cosmogonías sincrónicas del Enuma Elish, Eridu Genesis y Atrahasis. En conclusión, las teorías actuales del origen de la vida comportan limitaciones significativas en su abordaje, lo cual dilucida la posibilidad de considerar el texto Bíblico de la creación como una teoría alternativa al origen de la vida.
Article
Stephen C. Meyer is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Whitworth College in Spokane, Washington, and the Weyerhaeuser Research Fellow in the History and Philosophy of Biology at the Discovery Institute Center for Renewal of Science and Culture in Seattle, Washington. 1. Elliot Sober, The Philosophy of Biology (Boulder: Westview Press, 1993), 44. 2. Sober, The Philosophy of Biology, 44. 3. Darwin's only speculation on the origin of life is found in an unpublished 1871 letter to Joseph Hooker. In it he sketched the outlines of the chemical evolutionary idea, namely, that life could have first evolved from a series of chemical reactions: "It is often said that all the conditions for the first production of living organisms are now present, which could ever have been present. But if (and oh! what a big if!) we could conceive in some warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, light, heat, electricity, etc., that a protein compound was chemically formed ready to undergo still more complex changes, at the present such matter would be instantly devoured or absorbed, which would not have been the case before living creatures were formed." Cambridge University Library, Manuscripts Room, Darwin Archives, Letter to Hooker February, 1871. Courtesy Peter Gautrey. 4. Ernst Haeckel, The Wonders of Life, trans. Joseph McCabe (London: Watts, 1905), 111; Thomas Henry Huxley, "On the Physical Basis of Life," Fortnightly Review 5 (1869): 129-45. 5. Ernst Haeckel, Generelle Morphologie der Organismen, vol. 1 (Berlin: G. Reimer, 1866), 179-80; Ernst Haeckel, The History of Creation, vol. 1 (London: Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., 1892), 411-13; Huxley, "On the Physical Basis of Life," 138-39; Harmke Kamminga, "Studies in the History of Ideas on the Origin of Life," (Ph.D. diss., University of London, 1980), 60, 61. 6. Alexander I. Oparin, The Origin of Life, trans. Sergius Morgulis (New York: MacMillan, 1938), 64-103; Stephen C. Meyer, "Of Clues and Causes: A Methodological Interpretation of Origin of Life Studies," (Ph.D. diss., Cambridge University, 1991), 174-79, 194-98, 211, 212. 7. Oparin, Origin of Life, 98, 107, 108. 8. Oparin, Origin of Life, 133-35. 9. Oparin, Origin of Life, 148-59. 10. Oparin, Origin of Life, 195-96. 11. Loren R. Graham, Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1972), 260-63, 269, 272, 286-96; Lazcano Araujo, interview with Alexander I. Oparin in Mexico City newspaper Uno Mas Uno, May 7, 1981, 19. 12. Stanley L. Miller, "A Production of Amino Acids Under Possible Primitive Earth Conditions," Science 117 (1953): 528-29. 13. Robert Shapiro, "Prebiotic Ribose Synthesis: A Critical Analysis," Origins of Life and Evolution of the Biosphere 18 (1988): 71-95; Charles B. Thaxton, Walter L. Bradley, and Roger L. Olsen, The Mystery of Life's Origin (New York: Philosophical Library, 1984), 24-38; Charles B. Thaxton and Walter L. Bradley, "Information and the Origin of Life," in The Creation Hypothesis: Scientific Evidence for an Intelligent Designer, ed. J. P. Moreland (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1994), 173-210; James P. Ferris, "Prebiotic Synthesis: Problems and Challenges," Cold Springs Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology 52 (1987): 30ff; Kaoru Harada and Sidney W. Fox, "Thermal Synthesis of Amino Acids from a Postulated Primitive Terrestrial Atmosphere," Nature 201 (1964): 335-37; Richard Lemmon, "Chemical Evolution," Chemical Review 70 (1970): 95-96. 14. See, for example, Bruce Alberts and Dennis Bray et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell (New York: Garland, 1983), 91-141; see also Albert L. Lehninger, Biochemistry (New York: Worth Publishers, 1975), 23. 15. As the result of geological and geochemical studies of the earliest Precambrian rocks scientists now question whether an oceanic medium full of biological precursors—i.e., the so-called "prebiotic soup" required by Oparin's scenario—ever existed. In 1973, two scientists, Brooks and Shaw, argued that if an amino and nucleic acid-rich ocean had existed, it would have left large deposits of nitrogen rich minerals (nitrogenous cokes) in metamorphosed Precambrian sedimentary rocks. No evidence of such deposits exists, however. In the words of Brooks, "the nitrogen content of early Precambrian organic matter is relatively low (less than .015...
Article
The mica hypothesis is a new hypothesis about how life might have originated. The mica hypothesis provides simple solutions to many basic questions about the origins of life. In the mica hypothesis, the spaces between mica sheets functioned as the earliest cells. These 'cells' between mica sheets are filled with potassium ions, and they provide an environment in which: polymer entropy is low; cyclic wetting and drying can occur; molecules can evolve in isolated spaces and also migrate and ligate to form larger molecules. The mica hypothesis also proposes that mechanical energy (work) is a major energy source that could have been used on many length scales to form covalent bonds, to alter polymer conformations, and to bleb daughter cells off protocells. The mica hypothesis is consistent with many other origins hypotheses, including the RNA, lipid, and metabolic 'worlds'. Therefore the mica hypothesis has the potential to unify origins hypotheses, such that different molecular components and systems could simultaneously evolve in the spaces between mica sheets.
Article
Despite thermodynamic, bioenergetic and phylogenetic failings, the 81-year-old concept of primordial soup remains central to mainstream thinking on the origin of life. But soup is homogeneous in pH and redox potential, and so has no capacity for energy coupling by chemiosmosis. Thermodynamic constraints make chemiosmosis strictly necessary for carbon and energy metabolism in all free-living chemotrophs, and presumably the first free-living cells too. Proton gradients form naturally at alkaline hydrothermal vents and are viewed as central to the origin of life. Here we consider how the earliest cells might have harnessed a geochemically created proton-motive force and then learned to make their own, a transition that was necessary for their escape from the vents. Synthesis of ATP by chemiosmosis today involves generation of an ion gradient by means of vectorial electron transfer from a donor to an acceptor. We argue that the first donor was hydrogen and the first acceptor CO2.
Cytology, Genetics and Evolution (5 th Edn
  • P K Gupta
Gupta, P.K., 1997. Cytology, Genetics and Evolution (5 th Edn.). Rastogi Publications, Meerut, India.
Top evidence against the theory of evolution
  • D Lapointe
Lapointe, D., 1995. Top evidence against the theory of evolution. www.freeessays.cc/bd/41sff262.html.