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SCIENCE |
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Design and the Anthropic Principle
by Hugh
Ross, Ph.D.
Article
courtesy Reasons to Believe:
www.reasons.org
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Summary
Human existence is possible because the constants of physics and the
parameters for the universe and for planet Earth lie within certain highly
restricted ranges. John Wheeler and others interpret these amazing "coincidences"
as proof that human existence somehow determines the design of the universe.
Drawing an illogical parallel with delayed-choice experiments in quantum
mechanics, they say that observations by humans influence the design of the
universe, not only now, but back to the beginning. Such versions of what
is called the "anthropic principle" reflect current philosophical and religious
leanings towards the deification of man. They produce no evidence to support
the notion that man's present acts can influence past events. Furthermore,
their analogies with quantum mechanics break down on this point. The
"coincidental" values of the constants of physics and the parameters of the
universe point, rather, to a designer who transcends the dimensions and limits
of the physical universe.
Cosmic Connection
Now that the limits and parameters of the universe can be calculated, and
some even directly measured, astronomers and physicists have begun to recognize
a connection between these limits and parameters and the existence of life.
It is impossible to imagine a universe containing life in which any one of
the fundamental constants of physics or any one of the fundamental parameters
of the universe is different, even slightly so, in one way or another.
From this recognition arises the anthropic principleeverything
about the universe tends toward man, toward making life possible and sustaining
it. The first popularizer of the principle American physicist John Wheeler,
describes it in this way, "A life-giving factor lies at the centre of the
whole machinery and design of the
world."1
Of course, design in the natural world has been acknowledged since the beginning
of recorded history. Divine design is the message of each of the several
hundred creation accounts that form the basis of the world's
religions.2,
3 The idea that the natural world was designed
especially for mankind is the very bedrock of the Greek, as well as of the
Judeo-Christian world view. Western philosophers of the post-Roman era went
so far as to formalize a discipline called teleologythe study
of the evidence for overall design and purpose in nature. Teleology attracted
such luminaries as Augustine, Maimonides, Aquinas, Newton and Paley, all
of whom gave it much of their life's work.
Dirac and Dicke's Coincidences
One of the first to recognize that design may also apply to the gross features
of the universe was American physicist Robert Dicke. In 1961 he noted that
life is possible in the universe only because of the special relationships
among certain cosmological
parameters4
(relationships researched by British physicist Paul Dirac twenty-four years
earlier5).
Dirac noted that the number of baryons (protons plus neutrons) in the universe
is the square of the gravitational constant as well as the square of the
age of the universe (both expressed as dimensionless numbers). Dicke discerned
that with a slight change in either of these relationships life could not
exist. Stars of the right type for sustaining life supportable planets only
can occur during a certain range of ages for the universe. Similarly, stars
of the right type only can form for a narrow range of values of the gravitational
constant.
The Universe as a Fit Habitat
In recent years these and other parameters for the universe have been more
sharply defined and analyzed. Now, nearly two dozen coincidences evincing
design have been acknowledged:
1. The gravitational coupling constanti.e., the force of gravity,
determines what kinds of stars are possible in the universe. If the gravitational
force were slightly stronger, star formation would proceed more efficiently
and all Stars would be more massive than our sun by at least 1.4 times. These
large stars are important in that they alone manufacture elements heavier
than iron, and they alone disperse elements heavier than beryllium to the
interstellar medium. Such elements are essential for the formation of planets
as well as of living things in any form. However, these Stars burn too rapidly
and too unevenly to maintain life-supporting conditions on surrounding planets.
Stars as small as our sun are necessary for that.
On the other hand, if the gravitational force were slightly weaker, all stars
would have less than 0.8 times the mass of the sun. Though such stars burn
long and evenly enough to maintain life-supporting planets, no heavy elements
essential for building such planets or life would exist.
2. The strong nuclear force coupling constant holds together the particles
in the nucleus of an atom. If the strong nuclear force were slightly weaker,
multi-proton nuclei would not hold together. Hydrogen would be the only element
in the universe.
If this force were slightly stronger, not only would hydrogen be rare in
the universe, but the supply of the various life-essential elements heavier
than iron (elements resulting from the fission of very heavy elements) would
be insufficient. Either way, life would be
impossible.a
3. The weak nuclear force coupling constant affects the behavior of leptons.
Leptons form a whole class of elementary particles (e.g. neutrinos, electrons,
and photons) that do not participate in strong nuclear reactions. The most
familiar weak interaction effect is radioactivity, in particular, the beta
decay reaction:
neutron à proton + electron + neutrino
The availability of neutrons as the universe cools through temperatures
appropriate for nuclear fusion determines the amount of helium produced during
the first few minutes of the big bang. If the weak nuclear force coupling
constant were slightly larger, neutrons would decay more readily, and therefore
would be less available. Hence, little or no helium would be produced from
the big bang. Without the necessary helium, heavy elements sufficient for
the constructing of life would not be made by the nuclear furnaces inside
stars. On the other hand, if this constant were slightly smaller, the big
bang would burn most or all of the hydrogen into helium, with a subsequent
over-abundance of heavy elements made by stars, and again life would not
be possible.
A second, possibly more delicate, balance occurs for supernovae. It appears
that an outward surge of neutrinos determines whether or not a supernova
is able to eject its heavy elements into outer space. If the weak nuclear
force coupling constant were slightly larger, neutrinos would pass through
a supernova's envelop without disturbing it. Hence, the heavy elements produced
by the supernova would remain in the core. If the constant were slightly
smaller, the neutrinos would not be capable of blowing away the envelop.
Again, the heavy elements essential for life would remain trapped forever
within the cores of supernovae.
4. The electromagnetic coupling constant binds electrons to protons in atoms.
The characteristics of the orbits of electrons about atoms determines to
what degree atoms will bond together to form molecules. If the electromagnetic
coupling constant were slightly smaller, no electrons would be held in orbits
about nuclei. If it were slightly larger, an atom could not "share" an electron
orbit with other atoms. Either way, molecules, and hence life, would be
impossible.
5. The ratio of electron to proton mass also determines the characteristics
of (he orbits of electrons about nuclei. A proton is 1836 times more massive
than an electron. if the electron to proton mass ratio were slightly larger
or slightly smaller, again, molecules would not form, and life would be
impossible.
6. The age of the universe governs what kinds of stars exist. It takes about
three billion years for the first stars to form. It takes another ten or
twelve billion years for supernovae to spew out enough heavy elements to
make possible stars like our sun, stars capable of spawning rocky planets.
Yet another few billion years is necessary for solar-type stars to stabilize
sufficiently to support advanced life on any of its planets. Hence, if the
universe were just a couple of billion years younger, no environment suitable
for life would exist. However, if the universe were about ten (or more) billion
years older than it is, there would be no solar-type stars in a stable burning
phase in the right part of a galaxy. In other words, the window of time during
which life is possible in the universe is relatively narrow.
7. The expansion rate of the universe determines what kinds of stars, if
any, form in the universe. If the rate of expansion were slightly less, the
whole universe would have recollapsed before any solar-type stars could have
settled into a stable burning phase. If the universe were expanding slightly
more rapidly, no galaxies (and hence no stars) would condense from the general
expansion. How critical is this expansion rate? According to Alan
Guth,6 it must be fine-tuned to an accuracy of one part
in 1055. Guth, however, suggests that his
inflationary model, given certain values for the four fundamental forces
of physics, may provide a natural explanation for the critical expansion
rate.
8. The entropy level of the universe affects the condensation of massive
systems. The universe contains 100,000,000 photons for every baryon. This
makes the universe extremely entropic, i.e. a very efficient radiator and
a very poor engine. If the entropy level for the universe were slightly larger,
no galactic systems would form (and therefore no stars). If the entropy level
were slightly smaller, the galactic systems that formed would effectively
trap radiation and prevent any fragmentation of the Systems into stars Either
way the universe would be devoid of stars and, thus, of life. (Some models
for the universe relate this coincidence to a dependence of entropy upon
the gravitational coupling
constant.7,
8.)
9. The mass of the universe (actually mass + energy, since E =
mc2) determines how much nuclear burning
takes place as the universe cools from the hot big bang. If the mass were
slightly larger, too much deuterium (hydrogen atoms with nuclei containing
both a proton and a neutron) would form during the cooling of the big bang.
Deuterium is a powerful catalyst for subsequent nuclear burning in Stars.
This extra deuterium would cause stars to burn much too rapidly to sustain
life on any possible planet.
On the other hand, if the mass of the universe were slightly smaller, no
helium would be generated during the cooling of the big bang. Without helium,
stars cannot produce the heavy elements necessary for life. Thus, we see
a reason why the universe is as big as it is. If it were any smaller (or
larger), not even one planet like the earth would be possible.
10. The uniformity of the universe determines its stellar components. Our
universe has a high degree of uniformity. Such uniformity is considered to
arise most probably from a brief period of inflationary expansion near the
time of the origin of the universe. If the inflation (or some other mechanism)
had not smoothed the universe to the degree we see, the universe would have
developed into a plethora of black holes separated by virtually empty space.
On the other hand, if the universe were smoothed beyond this degree, stars,
star clusters, and galaxies may never have formed at all. Either way, the
resultant universe would be incapable of supporting life.
11. The stability of the proton affects the quantity of matter in the universe
and also the radiation level as it pertains to higher life forms. Each proton
contains three quarks. Through the agency of other particles (called bosons)
quarks decay into antiquarks, pions, and positive electrons. Currently in
our universe this decay process occurs on the average of only once per proton
per 1032
years.b If that
rate were greater, the biological consequences for large animals and man
would be catastrophic, for the proton decays would deliver lethal doses of
radiation.
On the other hand, if the proton were more stable (less easily formed and
less likely to decay), less matter would have emerged from events occurring
in the first split second of the universe's existence. There would be
insufficient matter in the universe for life to be possible.
12. The fine structure constants relate directly to each of the four fundamental
forces of physics (gravitational, electromagnetic, strong nuclear, and weak
nuclear). Compared to the coupling constants, the fine structure constants
typically yield stricter design constraints for the universe. For example,
the electromagnetic fine structure constant affects the opacity of stellar
material. (Opacity is the degree to which a material permits radiant energy
to pass through). In star formation, gravity pulls material together while
thermal motions tend to pull it apart. An increase in the opacity of this
material will limit the effect of thermal motions. Hence, smaller clumps
of material will be able to overcome the resistance of the thermal motions.
If the electromagnetic fine structure constant were slightly larger, all
stars would be less than 0.7 times the mass of the sun. If the electromagnetic
fine structure constant were slightly smaller, all stars would be more than
1.8 times the mass of the sun.
13. The velocity of light can be expressed in a variety of ways as a function
of any one of the fundamental forces of physics or as a function of one of
the fine structure constants. Hence, in the case of this constant, too, the
slightest change, up or down, would negate any possibility for life in the
universe.
14. The 8Be,
12C, and
16O nuclear energy levels affect the manufacture
and abundance of elements essential to life. Atomic nuclei exist in various
discrete energy levels. A transition from one level to another occurs through
the emission or capture of a photon that possesses precisely the energy
difference between the two levels. The first coincidence here is that
8Be decays in just 10-15
seconds. Because 8Be is so
highly unstable, it slows down the fusion process. If it were more stable,
fusion of heavier elements would proceed so readily that catastrophic stellar
explosions would result. Such explosions would prevent the formation of many
heavy elements essential for life. On the other hand, if
8Be were even more unstable, element production
beyond 8Be would not occur.
The second coincidence is that 12C happens
to have a nuclear energy level very slightly above the sum of the energy
levels for 8Be and
4He. Anything other than this precise nuclear
energy level for 12C would guarantee
insufficient carbon production for life.
The third coincidence is that 16O has exactly
the right nuclear energy level either to prevent all the carbon from turning
into oxygen or to facilitate sufficient production of
16O for life. Fred Hoyle, who discovered
these coincidences in 1953, concluded that "a superintellect has monkeyed
with physics, as well as with chemistry and
biology."10
15. The distance between stars affects the orbits and even the existence
of planets. The average distance between stars in our part of the galaxy
is about 30 trillion miles. If this distance were slightly smaller, the
gravitational interaction between stars would be so strong as to destabilize
planetary orbits. this destabilization would create extreme temperature
variations on the planet. If this distance were slightly larger, the heavy
element debris thrown out by supernovae would be so thinly distributed that
rocky planets like earth would never form. The average distance between stars
is just right to make possible a planetary system such as our own.
16. The rate of luminosity increase for stars affects the temperature conditions
on surrounding planets. Small stars, like the sun, settle into a stable burning
phase once the hydrogen fusion process ignites within their core. However,
during this stable burning phase such stars undergo a very gradual increase
in their luminosity. This gradual increase is perfectly suitable for the
gradual introduction of life forms, in a sequence from primitive to advanced,
upon a planet. If the rate of increase were slightly greater, a runaway green
house effectc would be fell sometime between
the introduction of the primitive and the introduction of the advanced life
forms. If the rate of increase were slightly smaller, a runaway
freezingd of
the oceans and lakes would occur. Either way, the planet's temperature would
become too extreme for advanced life or even for the long-term survival of
primitive life.
This list of sensitive constants is by no means complete. And yet it demonstrates
why a growing number of physicists and astronomers have become convinced
that the universe was not only divinely brought into existence but also divinely
designed. American astronomer George Greenstein expresses his thoughts:
As we survey all the evidence, the thought insistently arises that some
supernatural agencyor, rather, Agencymust be involved. Is it
possible that suddenly, without intending to, we have stumbled upon scientific
proof of the existence of a Supreme Being? Was it God who stepped in and
so providentially crafted the cosmos for our
benefit?11
The Earth as a Fit Habitat
It is not just the universe that bears evidence for design. The earth itself
reveals such evidence. Frank Drake, Carl Sagan, and Iosef Shklovsky were
among the first astronomers to concede this point when they attempted to
estimate the number planets in the universe with environments favorable for
the support of life. In the early 1960's they recognized that only a certain
kind of star with a planet just the right distance from that star would provide
the necessary conditions for
life.12 On this basis they made some rather optimistic
estimates for the probability of finding life elsewhere in the universe.
Shklovsky and Sagan, for example, claimed that 0.001 percent of all stars
could have a planet upon which advanced life
resides.13
While their analysis was a step in the right direction, it overestimated
the range of permissible star types and the range of permissible planetary
distances. It also ignored many other significant factors. A sample
of parameters sensitive for the support of life on a planet are listed in
Table 1.
Table 1: Evidence for the design of the sun-earth-moon
system14 - 31
The following parameters cannot exceed certain limits without disturbing
the earth's capacity to support life. Some of these parameters are more narrowly
confining than others. For example, the first parameter would eliminate only
half the stars from candidacy for life-supporting Systems, whereas parameters
five, seven, and eight would each eliminate more than ninety-nine in a hundred
star-planet systems. Not only must the parameters for life support fall within
a certain restrictive range, but they must remain relatively constant over
time. And we know that several, such as parameters fourteen through nineteen,
are subject to potentially catastrophic fluctuation. In addition to the
parameters listed here, there are others, such as the eccentricity of a planet's
orbit, that have an upper (or a lower) limit only.
1. number of star companions
2. parent star birth date
3. parent star age
4. parent star distance from center of galaxy
5. parent star mass
-
if greater: luminosity output from the star would not be sufficiently
stable
-
if less: range of distances appropriate for life would be too narrow;
tidal forces would disrupt the rotational period for a planet of the right
distance
6. parent star color
7. surface gravity
8. distance from parent star
9. thickness of crust
10. rotation period
11. gravitational interaction with a moon
-
if greater: tidal effects on the oceans, atmosphere, and rotational
period would he too severe
-
if less: earth's orbital obliquity would change too much causing climatic
instabilities
12. magnetic field
13. axial tilt
14. albedo (ratio of reflected light to total amount falling on surface)
15. oxygen to nitrogen ratio in atmosphere
16. carbon dioxide and water vapor levels in atmosphere
17. ozone level in atmosphere
18. atmospheric electric discharge rate
19. seismic activity
About a dozen other parameters, such as atmospheric chemical composition,
currently are being researched for their sensitivity in the support of life.
However, the nineteen listed in Table 1 in themselves lead safely to the
conclusion that much fewer than a trillionth of a trillionth of a percent
of all stars will have a planet capable of sustaining life. Considering that
the universe contains only about a trillion galaxies, each averaging a hundred
billion
stars,e we can
see that not even one planet would be expected, by natural processes alone,
to possess the necessary conditions to sustain
life.f No wonder
Robert Rood and James
Trefil14 and others have surmised that intelligent physical
life exists only on the earth. It seems abundantly clear that the earth,
too, in addition to the universe, has experienced divine design.
Man the Creator?
The growing evidence of design would seem to provide further convincing support
for the belief that the Creator-God of the Bible formed the universe and
the earth. Even Paul Davies concedes that "the impression of design is
overwhelming."32 There must exist a designer. Yet, for whatever
reasons, a few astrophysicists still battle the conclusion. Perhaps the designer
is not God. But, if the designer is not God, who is? The alternative, some
suggest, is man himself.
The evidence proffered for man as the creator comes from an analogy to delayed
choice experiments in quantum mechanics. In such experiments it appears that
the observer can influence the outcome of quantum mechanical events. With
every quantum particle there is an associated wave. This wave represents
the probability of finding the particle at a particular point in space. Before
the particle is detected there is no specific knowledge of its
locationonly a probability of where it might be. But, once the particle
has been detected, its exact location is known. in this sense, the act of
observation is said by some to give reality to the particle. What is true
for a quantum particle, they continue, may be true for the universe at large.
American physicist John Wheeler sees the universe as a gigantic feed-back
loop.
The Universe [capitalized in the original] starts small at the big bang,
grows in size, gives rise to life and observers and observing equipment.
The observing equipment, in turn, through the elementary quantum processes
that terminate on it, takes part in giving tangible "reality" to events that
occurred long before there was any life
anywhere.33
In other words, the universe creates man, but man through his observations
of the universe brings the universe into real existence. George Greenstein
is more direct in positing that "the universe brought forth life in order
to exist ... that the very cosmos does not exist unless
observed."34
Here we find a reflection of the question debated in freshmen philosophy
classes across the land:
If a tree falls in the forest, and no one is there to see it or hear it,
does it really fall?
Quantum mechanics merely shows us that in the micro world of particle physics
man is limited in his ability to measure quantum effects. Since quantum entities
at any moment have the potential or possibility of behaving either as particles
or waves, it is impossible, for example, to accurately measure both the position
and the momentum of a quantum entity (the Heisenberg uncertainty principle).
By choosing to determine the position of the entity the human observer has
thereby lost information about its momentum.
It is not that the observer gives "reality" to the entity, but rather the
observer chooses what aspect of the reality of the entity he wishes to discern.
It is not that the Heisenberg uncertainty principle disproves the principle
of causality, but simply that the causality is hidden from human investigation.
The cause of the quantum effect is not lacking, nor is it
mysteriously linked to the human observation of the effect after the
fact.g
This misapplication of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is but one defect
in but one version of the new "observer-as-creator" propositions derived
from quantum physics. Some other flaws are summarized here:
Quantum mechanical limitations apply only to micro, not macro, systems. The
relative uncertainty approaches zero as the number of quantum particles in
the system increases. Therefore, what is true for a quantum particle would
not be true for the universe at large.
The time separation between a quantum event and its observed result is always
a relatively short one (at least for the analogies under discussion). A
multi-billion year time separation far from fits the picture.
The arrow of time has never been observed to reverse, nor do we see any traces
of a reversal beyond the scope of our observations. Time and causality move
inexorably forward. Therefore, to suggest that human activity now somehow
can affect events billions of years in the past is nothing short of absurd.
Intelligence, or personality, is not a factor in the observation of quantum
mechanical events. Photographic plates, for example, are perfectly capable
of performing observations.
Both relativity and the gauge theory of quantum mechanics, now established
beyond reasonable question by experimental
evidence,37 state that the correct description of nature
is that in which the human observer is irrelevant.
Science has yet to produce a shred of evidence to support the notion that
man created his universe.
Universe Becoming God?
In The Anthropic Cosmological Principle, British astronomer John Barrow
and American mathematical physicist Frank
Tipler,38 begin by reviewing evidences for design of the
universe, then go on to address several radical versions of the anthropic
principle, including Wheeler's feed-back loop connection between mankind
and the universe. Referring to such theories as PAP (participatory anthropic
principle), they propose, instead, FAP (final anthropic principle).
In their FAP, the life that is now in the universe (and, according to PAP,
created the universe) will continue to evolve until it reaches a state of
totality that they call the Omega Point. At the Omega Point
Life will have gained control of all matter and forces not only in a single
universe, but in all universes whose existence is logically possible; life
will have spread into all spatial regions in all universes which could logically
exist, and will have stored an infinite amount of information including all
bits of knowledge which it is logically possible to
know.39
In a footnote they declare that "the totality of life at the Omega Point
is omnipotent, omnipresent, and
omniscient!"40
Let me translate: the universe created man, man created the universe, and
together the universe and man in the end will become the Almighty transcendent
Creator. Martin Gardner gives this evaluation of their idea:
What should one make of this quartet of WAP, SAP, PAP, and FAP? In my not
so humble opinion I think the last principle is best called CRAP, the Completely
Ridiculous Anthropic
Principle.41
In their persistent rejection of an eternal transcendent Creator, cosmologists
seem to be resorting to more and more absurd alternatives. An exhortation
from the Bible is appropriate, "See to it that no one takes you captive through
hollow and deceptive philosophy."42
Insufficient Universe
It is clear that man is too limited to have created the universe. But, it
is also evident that the universe is too limited to have created man. The
universe contains no more than 1080
baryonsh and
has been in existence for no more than
1018 seconds.
Compared to the inorganic systems comprising the universe, biological systems
are enormously complex. The genome (complete set of chromosomes necessary
for reproduction) of an E. coli bacterium has the equivalent of about
two million nucleotides. A single human cell contains the equivalent of about
six billion nucleotides. Moreover, unlike inorganic systems, the sequence in which the individual components are assembled is critical for the
survival of biological systems. Also, only amino acids with left handed
configurations can be used in protein synthesis, the amino acids can be joined
only by peptide bonds, each amino acid first must be activated by a specific
enzyme, and multiple special enzymes (enzymes themselves are enormously complex
sequence-critical molecules) are required to bind messenger RNA to ribosomes
before protein synthesis can begin or end.
The bottom line is that the universe is at least ten billion orders of magnitude
(a factor of 1010,000,000,000 times) too
small or too young for life to have assembled itself by natural
processes.i
These kinds of calculations have been done by researchers, both non-theists
and theists, in a variety of
disciplines.43-58
Invoking other universes cannot solve the problem. All such models require
that the additional universes remain totally out of contact with one another,
that is, their space-time manifolds cannot overlap. The only explanation
left to us to tell how living organisms received their highly complex and
ordered configurations is that an intelligent, transcendent Creator personally
infused this information.
An intelligent, transcendent Creator must have brought the universe into
existence. An intelligent, transcendent Creator must have designed the universe.
An intelligent, transcendent Creator must have designed planet Earth. An
intelligent, transcendent Creator must have designed life.
FOOTNOTES:
a. The strong nuclear force is actually much more delicately
balanced. An increase as small as two percent means that protons would never
form from quarks (particles that form the building blocks of baryons and
mesons). A similar decrease means that certain heavy elements essential for
life would be unstable.
b. Direct observations of proton decay have yet to be confirmed.
Experiments simply reveal that the average proton lifetime must exceed
1032
years.9 However,
if the average proton lifetime exceeds about
1034 years, than there would be no physical
means for generating the matter that is observed in the universe.
c. An example of the greenhouse effect is a locked car parked
in the sun. Visible light from the sun passes easily through the windows
of the car, is absorbed by the interior, and reradiated as infrared light.
But, the windows will not permit the passage of infrared radiation. Hence,
heat accumulates in the car's interior. Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
works like the windows of a car. The early earth had much more carbon dioxide
in its atmosphere. However, the first plants extracted this carbon dioxide
and released oxygen. Hence, the increase in the sun's luminosity was balanced
off by the decrease in the greenhouse effect caused by the lessened amount
of carbon dioxide In the atmosphere.
d. A runaway freezing would occur because snow and ice reflect
better than other materials on the surface of the earth. Less solar energy
is absorbed thereby lowering the surface temperature which in turn creates
more snow and ice.
e. The average number of planets per star is still largely
unknown. The latest research suggests that only bachelor stars with
characteristics similar to those of the sun may possess planets. Regardless,
all researchers agree that the figure is certainly much less than one planet
per star.
f. The assumption is that all life is based on carbon. Silicon
and boron at one time were considered candidates for alternate life chemistries.
However, silicon can sustain amino acid chains no more than a hundred such
molecules long. Boron allows a little more complexity but has the disadvantage
of not being very abundant in the universe.
g. One can easily get the impression from the physics literature
that the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics is the only accepted
philosophical explanation of what is going on in the micro world. According
to this school of thought, "1) There is no reality in the absence of observation;
2) Observation creates reality." In addition to the Copenhagen interpretation
physicist Nick Herbert outlines and critiques six different philosophical
models for interpreting quantum
events.35 Physicist
and theologian Stanley Jaki outlines yet an eighth
model.36 While
a clear philosophical understanding of quantum reality is not yet agreed
upon. physicists do agree on the results one expects from quantum events.
h. Baryons are protons and other fundamental particles, such
as neutrons, that decay into protons.
i. A common rebuttal is that not all amino acids in organic
molecules must be strictly sequenced. One can destroy or randomly replace
about 1 amino acid out of 100 without doing damage to the function of the
molecule. This is vital since life necessarily exists in a
sequencedisrupting radiation environment. However, this is equivalent
to writing a computer program that will tolerate the destruction of 1 statement
of code out of 1001. In other words, this error-handling ability of organic
molecules constitutes a far more unlikely occurrence than strictly sequenced
molecules.
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Barrow, John D. and Tipler, Frank J. The Anthropic
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Mind in the Cosmos. (New York: William Morrow, (1988), pp.68-97.
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Earth," in Icarus, 33. (1978), pp.23-39.
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of Life on Earth. New York: Summit Books, (1986), 117-131.
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