Isn’t it refreshing when scientists
recognize that they deal in theory, not necessarily in reality!?
According to Lynde Landgon writing
for World News Service on December
31, 2017 a secular scientist – who attempted to explain the origins of life – has
made a bold admission that bolsters arguments against Darwinian evolution. Jack Szostak of Harvard University published a
2016 paper in Nature Chemistry
claiming he and his colleagues had figured out a way to get RNA to replicate
itself.
Darwinian evolutionists believe RNA
(a nucleic acid present in all living cells) were some of the first molecules
to form on the Earth and give rise to living things. But for that to happen, the RNA would have had
to somehow reproduce on its own without requisite enzymes that would not have
evolved yet. Szostak claimed to have
facilitated RNA self-replication in his lab, but in December 2017, he said one
of his colleagues, Tivoli Olsen, realized they had misinterpreted the data when
she could not reproduce the original experiment’s results. “In retrospect, we were totally blinded by
our belief [in our findings] … we were not as careful or rigorous as we should
have been (and as Tivoli was) in interpreting these experiments,” Szostak told Retraction Watch.
In his 2009 book “Signature in the Cell,”
the Discovery Institute’s Stephen Meyer noted the inadequacy of using RNA to
explain how life spontaneously appeared on earth. That inadequacy continues to stymie
evolutionists today. “As I have
investigated various models that combined chance and necessity, I have noted an
increasing sense of futility and frustration arising amongst scientists who
work on the origin of life,” Meyer wrote … referencing some of Szostak’s
earlier work on the subject.
Ann Gauger, a developmental
biologist and author for the Evolution
News & Science Today blog, commended Szostak and Olsen’s integrity for
coming forward with the retraction on their own. “Scientists are human, and they desire
certain outcomes that fit with strongly held beliefs,” Gauger wrote. “It is absolutely necessary that we be our own
severest critics, and check and double check our interpretations of data. This applies to all points of view on the
origins spectrum.”
Wouldn’t be wonderful if more
scientists came to understand that they are dealing in theory, not in absolute
truth!?
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling
Memorial Chapel
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