I have posted the following question on this board before and have never received a very good answer. Perhaps there is someone on this board with
enough technical knowledge who can provide a good reply. Also I would like to hear from anyone who would like to speculate what the answer might be.
My question: Why is there only one phylogenetic tree when one would expect several phylogenetic trees. To reply that all life one earth is descended
from a single source is not the answer. My question is why only a single source.
To expound further on the question, Douglas Theobald in his thesis "The Scientific Case for Common Descent"
www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/makes the case that all living organisms on earth are descended
from a single source (and if you "read between the lines" perhaps even a SINGLE organism.) To quote Dr. Theobald:
According to the theory of common descent, modern living organisms, with all their incredible differences, are the progeny of one single species
in the distant past.
In short Theobald's contention is that the vertebrates, the invertebrates, plants, trees, lions, tigers, ostriches, apes, men, fungi, etc. all have a
common ancestor, a SINGLE origin. Dr. Theobald describes a phylogenetic tree which traces all living organisms from this single source. For example
vertebrates and invertebrates are supposed to have descended from a more ancient ancestor. That more ancient ancestor came some more ancient ancestor,
etc. This tree traces back to a single point, a single organism which made the abiogenetic jump from non-living to living (perhaps one complex
molecule 3.5 billion years ago). Theobald in his monograph does not delve into abiogenesis (the origins of life from inanimate material); he starts
with the common ancestor of all life. In his paper, Theobald does not consider theories on abiogenesis, just that it happened. Again quoting Dr.
Theobald:
Furthermore, because it is not part of evolutionary theory, abiogenesis also is not considered in this discussion of macroevolution: abiogenesis
is an independent hypothesis. In evolutionary theory it is taken as axiomatic that an original self-replicating life form existed in the distant past,
regardless of its origin. All scientific theories have their respective, specific explanatory domains; no scientific theory proposes to explain
everything.
The logical conclusion of Theobald 's paper is that the event of abiogenesis (living replicating organisms arising out of non-living matter) happened
ONLY ONCE in the 4.5 billion year history of the earth. Indeed if abiogenesis happened more than once, then we should see more than one phylogenetic
tree tracing back to several common ancestors with totally different characteristics (such a completely different DNA makeup).
However current theories of abiogenesis state that living organisms must arise out of the conditions of the early earth. That this event (the
abiogenetic jump from non-living to living) must happen in these conditions and is an event which happens often enough to guarantee the generation of
living organisms over a relatively short period of time (on a geological scale, say less than 500 million years). In other words, if we have enough
naturally occurring proteins in a primordial soup, enough are going to combine together to eventually form living organisms. Current theories sate
that the oceans formed 3.8 billion years ago; beginning of photosynthesis by blue-green algae started 3.5 billion years ago. Life jumped from nothing
(3.8 billion years ago) to algae (3.5 billion years ago) in a period of about 300 million years. Algae are several orders of magnitude more complex
than protein molecules. This suggests then that abiogenesis should be a relatively common event in the early conditions of the earth (in short life
forms started firing up as soon as the earth cooled enough to permit life). This then leads one to the conclusion that there should be several
phylogenetic trees which can be traced back to different organisms which made this abiogenetic jump . In other words, today we should be seeing
living organisms who are totally different from one and and other (such as animals who use a completely different DNA makeup than ours).
Now as a believer in Intelligent Design, I have no problem with Common Descent. It just proves that God created all life on earth from a single
spark of life generated from inanimate material. In other words, God was very frugal in the generation of life on earth. He did not need to create a
blizzard of organisms from inanimate material to generate life on this planet, He did the job with just one.
So my question to the Darwinists is:
In Common Descent you state that life on earth arose from a single source. You do not really address the issue of abiogenesis. However you do state
that living matter must naturally arise out of the environment of the early earth. If this event naturally occurs, then a whole bunch of different
organisms should then develop in these conditions and lead eventually (today) to living creatures who a fundamentally different from each other. Then
why is the only one kind of basic life on this earth when there should be many.
Why only one source of life
[edit on 26-2-2008 by jagdflieger]
[edit on 26-2-2008 by jagdflieger]