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Origins: a skeptic's guide to the creation of life on earth.


Origins: A Skeptic's Guide to the Creation of Life on Earth.

Robert Shapiro This article is about the lawyer. For the economist, see Robert J. Shapiro.
Robert Leslie Shapiro (born September 2, 1942 in Plainfield, New Jersey), is a high-profile attorney who is most notable for being part of the defense team which successfully defended
. Summit, $17.95. Scientific accounts of the origin of life have been called the achilles' heel of evolutionary biology  Evolutionary biology is a sub-field of biology concerned with the origin and descent of species, as well as their change, multiplication, and diversity over time. : an inviting target for the attacks of Creationists. Science can describe the evolutionary path leading from an ancestral cell to a human being with more certainty than it can the development of the first cell from inert matter. To the skeptical eye of Shapiro, a biochemist at New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the , those explanations that have been offered look more like mythology than like science.

Textbooks and popular accounts suggest that life arose from a primordial soup primordial soup
n.
A liquid rich in organic compounds and providing favorable conditions for the emergence and growth of life forms.



primordial soup  
, a thin broth of simple organic compounds formed by the action of lightning or sunlight on a primitive atmosphere rich in ammonia, methane, and hydrogen. The hypothesis owes its ascendancy largely to a 1952 experiment in which an electric spark Electric spark

A transient form of gaseous conduction. This type of discharge is difficult to define, and no universally accepted definition exists. It can perhaps best be thought of as the transition between two more or less stable forms of gaseous conduction.
 discharging in a simulated primitive atmosphere generated several amino acids, the building blocks of proteins.

Geochemists no longer believe that the primitive atmosphere contained the right gases, and biochemists doubt that the amino acids would have survived in a primeval pri·me·val  
adj.
Belonging to the first or earliest age or ages; original or ancient: a primeval forest.



[From Latin pr
 ocean. Moreover, Shapiro argues, the soup doesn't get you very far: the chance that a complex molecule such as a protein or DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 will spontaneously assemble in a dilute solution of simple building blocks is vanishingly small. Yet, in one form or another, the primor-dial-soup hypothesis remains the orthodox view. Why?

Shapiro points to what he calls a "predestinist bias' among students of the origin of life: an almost religious sense that "the laws of the universe contain a built-in bias that favors the production of the chemicals vital to biochemistry and ultimately to human life itself.' Crude, probably irrelevant demonstrations like the 1952 experiment are convincing to people who are already disposed to believe that the chemistry of the universe and thus that of the early earth tended inevitably toward the generation of life.

Shapiro dissects related hypotheses, which place the origin of life in cloud droplets or hot springs on the ocean floor and specify the first living stuff variously as protein or DNA or RNA RNA: see nucleic acid.
RNA
 in full ribonucleic acid

One of the two main types of nucleic acid (the other being DNA), which functions in cellular protein synthesis in all living cells and replaces DNA as the carrier of genetic
, and finds the same bias at work. He also examines, with varying degrees of sympathy, several very different proposals, including suggestions that the first living things were crystals of clay or that life on earth had an extraterrestrial origin.

The debate, as Shapiro presents it, is rife with speculations presented too forcefully, with inconclusive data put forward as definitive evidence and with explanations that look very much like Creation myths. It is no wonder that actual Creationists, who advance their own claims by seizing on inconsistencies in genuine science, have found an easy mark here. "As a group who themselves have attempted to pass off mythology as science, they can readily identify rivals who are attempting, even if unconsciously, the same substitution.'

Shapiro sometimes loses track of his argument in thickets of technical detail, and like anyone who sets out to debunk de·bunk  
tr.v. de·bunked, de·bunk·ing, de·bunks
To expose or ridicule the falseness, sham, or exaggerated claims of: debunk a supposed miracle drug.
, he can get to sound smug. Even so, he gives a fascinating tour of the scholarly scene and a worthwhile lesson in the meaning of science.
COPYRIGHT 1986 Washington Monthly Company
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1986, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Appenzeller, Timothy
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:May 1, 1986
Words:523
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