Theory of Evolution

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Credo_ut_Intelligam

Guest
#61
So in what way does religion separate "morality" from "personal preferences"? A supernatural dictator? lovely.
Morality is based on God's holy, unchanging nature. It's not a matter of whim, especially not man's whims. And God is no dictator, as Douglas Kelly once said, "Eternal sovereign power is wielded by one who has nail prints in His hands."

I suppose you find it more fitting that "morality" finds itself in a human dictator?

Also, of course morality was absent before man. Just have to look at the behavior of animals to see that
According to the atheistic worldview, yes. You admit that, but you have ignored the point I drew from it: it isn't morality at all, it's just personal preference. But when most people speak of "morality" they usually don't simply mean their personal preference. That's why we use morality to judge whether a personal preference is right or wrong, good or bad. Under your view, such judgments would be meaningless... as your concept of morality is.

My point is, life on earth has predated religious scripture substantially.
Actually your claim was that animals (including humans) have been around a lot longer than religion. Since you explicitly include humans, then you are claiming that humans have been around a lot longer than religion.

Now you are making a different qualified claim: "life" (which is so nebulous a term that I guess we can go all the way back to the first single celled organism) has been around longer than religious writings.

Well, okay, never mind the fact that you are shifting the goal posts, but what's the significance of the fact that life predates religious writings?
 
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Credo_ut_Intelligam

Guest
#62
The subject at had is the theory of evolution. Check the title.
Recall that you’re supposed to be demonstrating that my comments were irrelevant to the subject at hand. Pointing out that the title of the thread is “Theory of Evolution” doesn’t demonstrate that a discussion about what scientists mean by theory of evolution is irrelevant.

The subject according to the person who started the thread was Ida, not simply (or even evidently) whether evolution was true or false. Check the first post. And I addressed that subject. Every thread has a number of “subjects at hand” depending on how the conversation develops. For example, at one point you start talking about the five (six) groups in Genesis 1, that has nothing to do with the theory of evolution.

My post was about what I felt was the weaknesses of macro-evolution.
Great. Why are you bringing that up? You’re supposed to be demonstrating that my comments about what theory of evolution meant are irrelevant. Or this just responding for the sake of responding?

I was one of the people you responded to, so here we are in this conversation.
This conversation is a rabbit trail of your own making. You made comments in regard to gravity having a known engine. I pointed out that was false, no one knows how gravity works yet. Instead of giving a rebuttal to this, you decided to go ad hominem saying that I wasn’t contributing to the conversation. That’s when you made the ironic comments about debate judge, remember?

You responded to one of my posts, so I answered you.
And it seems to me like you’re just writing something for the sake of a response. You haven’t kept track of how you got to this point. You made comments about gravity. I responded to comments about gravity. You went ad hominem. I responded to ad hominem.

No, you put forth the definition of "theory" that you use
No, I put forth the definition of theory that scientists use. I can provide reference if you'd like?

you did not suggest a better way of saying it, since the context was obviously using the definition meaning "mere speculation".
This is what you want to assert. But you haven’t given me any reason to accept your assertion. The context was simply that evolution is a theory and because of that can’t be proven. All I did was point out why this won't work, given how scientists use the term "theory."

I responded with a suggestion that what the poster considered "proof" and what a evolutionist might be considered "proof" is two different things and so when approaching the subject, there needs to be a work of the Holy Spirit as well.
That's fine. Notice that it's hardly different than what I did: I responded with the statement that what a scientist considered a "theory" didn't merit the statement that the poster made.

But in my case, you want to make a big deal out of that. I wonder why?

In the context, it is apparent how they are using the word.
Why don't you go ahead and give a demonstration as to how the context requires it to be read in a certain way.

And lets assume, for the sake of argument, that the commenter meant "mere speculation" by theory. Would that make my own response irrelevant? No, in fact my point would still be valid, because nothing I said depended on an assumption that the commenter was using "theory" in one way and not in another.

If you think it did, then demonstrate it.

You're long on assertions, short on argument. You're trying to get by with just make a few quick one liners and not giving anything to back it up.

It's not you minimal response to the prompt that is the problem, it is your number of responses outside the prompt.
Again, give some demonstration. Some argument, so I know you're not just thumping your chest.

The Socratic method uses questions, directed at the student, to lead the student to the proper conclusion.
Socrates never considered himself to be teaching those he questioned. In fact he freely admitted that he didn't know the answers to most of his questions either.

And the socratic method is not exclusively (or even primarily) a teaching technique. It's a debate technique. So your conclusion that I'm trying to be a teacher because I'm asking questions is just another one of your unwarranted assertions.

Depends upon the question. for instance, this series of questions is definitely Socratic because you are not so much trying to find answers as responding to my statements with questions in hope of leading to your foregone conclusion.
What is my foregone conclusion?

Is that a socratic question?

And what was your point in all this again? You don't like questions??

I don't think that it is nefarious. I think that it is habitual.
So your point is I ask habitual questions?

I'm sorry, what was your point again?

Where several definitions are possible, context is the first factor in deciding which definition is used. This is particularly true in English.
That's not a syllogism. I asked for you to give a demonstration as to how the context favored a particular meaning that is relevant to my point about how scientists use the word theory. I didn't say context is unimportant, so all you've given me is this non-response.

Actually, Newton was following up on Gallileo's comment about gravilty in the light of a sun-centered system. Gravity simply meant weight, so when the ancients were asked, "Why do objects fall?" they answered, "Because of gravity."
That's not entirely correct and is anachronistic, as I already pointed out. Impetus theory was very common and so was the Aristotelian teleological explanation, by which bodies fell because that's where they belonged.

You can read the brief wikipedia article here: History of gravitational theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Note, "It would not be until Isaac Newton that the force of gravity was given proper scientific treatment and an accurate mathematical expression upon which a correct description of gravity can be deduced."

Noting that a object falls (even that it falls by something called "weight") isn't postulating gravity. That's why there were different theories about *why* objects fell.

Gravity is invisble, but observable.
If something is invisible, it can't be observed (unless you simply mean you're aware of it). If you have amazing superpowers and can observe invisible things, please describe to all of us what gravity looks like. What color is it?

This I love. "Dictionaries aren't very good at defining things in disputes."
Knew you'd like it. It's true, for the reason I listed. Dictionaries rarely give the necessary and jointly sufficient conditions to a concept. But that's exactly what persons need when persons are debating whether a thing is this or that or whether it should be called this or that or what it means for a thing to be this or that.

Take for example one dictionary's definition of free will: "1. The ability or discretion to choose; free choice: chose to remain behind of my own free will. 2. The power of making free choices that are unconstrained by external circumstances or by an agency such as fate or divine will"

Anyone who is familiar with the free-will debate in philosophy would know these are horrible definitions. And if anyone tried to appeal to these definitions to show that we have free will they'd be wasting everyone's time. Take the first definition: compatibilists say we make choices, and libertarians admit that under compatibilism persons can make choices, but they don't want to admit that compatibilism gives us free will. On the other hand, Derk Pereboom doesn't believe we have free will, but he still says we can make choices and deliberations. Now take the second definition: everyone agrees that one of the necessary conditions to free will is that we be unconstrained by external circumstances, but there is huge disagreement about whether being free of the divine will (or decree) is necessary to free will. Many persons think that we can be under the divine will or decree and still be free.

So it should be obvious that anyone who simply appeals to this dictionary (thefreedictionary.com) to sort out free will is only going to confuse themselves. It will only make it harder when they have to come to terms with philosophical definitions of free will that try to give the necessary and jointly sufficient conditions to free will.

This isn't to say that dictionaries are useless or should never be appealed to. For the most part, they record common usage of a term. So if you want to know how a word is commonly used it's a good place to go. But sometimes it's just absurd (look up the definition for "choice" and see how redundant and uninformative it is).

A ball falling to the ground is a observable action, which we call gravity.
So if I were to push you off a building you would yell "Oh, no! I'm gravitying!!"? No… we call that falling. And we explain the falling in terms of the force called gravity.

See above.
So your claiming your definition of gravity is fall… So if I trip as I walk out the door I gravity? And you say you can observe this, but all your really observing is the effects of gravity not gravity itself.

Now, if you still want to say I'm redefining your terms, fine. Your use of the terms is absurd. No one views falling as synonymous with gravity and no one views the effect (you observing an object fall) of a thing as synonymous with the cause of a thing (gravity).

And that is exactly the point. We are in a thread on the theory of evolution and instead of discussing evolution, we are discussing what theory means, what observable means, what gravity means, whether dictionaries can be used to define words, etc.
As I pointed out to you before, that's because someone claimed evolution was unproveable because it was a theory. Naturally, that will require us to understand what the word "theory" means and how it is used in order to see if it is valid. If someone said "Evolution can't be proven because it is spunkle!" don't you think we would have to understand what a spunkle is to know whether that is a valid claim and what relevance it would have to evolutionists?

I will continue to respond for as long as you do.
I have time.
 
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charisenexcelcis

Guest
#63
Recall that you’re supposed to be demonstrating that my comments were irrelevant to the subject at hand. Pointing out that the title of the thread is “Theory of Evolution” doesn’t demonstrate that a discussion about what scientists mean by theory of evolution is irrelevant.

The subject according to the person who started the thread was Ida, not simply (or even evidently) whether evolution was true or false. Check the first post. And I addressed that subject. Every thread has a number of “subjects at hand” depending on how the conversation develops. For example, at one point you start talking about the five (six) groups in Genesis 1, that has nothing to do with the theory of evolution.



Great. Why are you bringing that up? You’re supposed to be demonstrating that my comments about what theory of evolution meant are irrelevant. Or this just responding for the sake of responding?



This conversation is a rabbit trail of your own making. You made comments in regard to gravity having a known engine. I pointed out that was false, no one knows how gravity works yet. Instead of giving a rebuttal to this, you decided to go ad hominem saying that I wasn’t contributing to the conversation. That’s when you made the ironic comments about debate judge, remember?



And it seems to me like you’re just writing something for the sake of a response. You haven’t kept track of how you got to this point. You made comments about gravity. I responded to comments about gravity. You went ad hominem. I responded to ad hominem.



No, I put forth the definition of theory that scientists use. I can provide reference if you'd like?



This is what you want to assert. But you haven’t given me any reason to accept your assertion. The context was simply that evolution is a theory and because of that can’t be proven. All I did was point out why this won't work, given how scientists use the term "theory."



That's fine. Notice that it's hardly different than what I did: I responded with the statement that what a scientist considered a "theory" didn't merit the statement that the poster made.

But in my case, you want to make a big deal out of that. I wonder why?



Why don't you go ahead and give a demonstration as to how the context requires it to be read in a certain way.

And lets assume, for the sake of argument, that the commenter meant "mere speculation" by theory. Would that make my own response irrelevant? No, in fact my point would still be valid, because nothing I said depended on an assumption that the commenter was using "theory" in one way and not in another.

If you think it did, then demonstrate it.

You're long on assertions, short on argument. You're trying to get by with just make a few quick one liners and not giving anything to back it up.



Again, give some demonstration. Some argument, so I know you're not just thumping your chest.



Socrates never considered himself to be teaching those he questioned. In fact he freely admitted that he didn't know the answers to most of his questions either.

And the socratic method is not exclusively (or even primarily) a teaching technique. It's a debate technique. So your conclusion that I'm trying to be a teacher because I'm asking questions is just another one of your unwarranted assertions.



What is my foregone conclusion?

Is that a socratic question?

And what was your point in all this again? You don't like questions??



So your point is I ask habitual questions?

I'm sorry, what was your point again?



That's not a syllogism. I asked for you to give a demonstration as to how the context favored a particular meaning that is relevant to my point about how scientists use the word theory. I didn't say context is unimportant, so all you've given me is this non-response.



That's not entirely correct and is anachronistic, as I already pointed out. Impetus theory was very common and so was the Aristotelian teleological explanation, by which bodies fell because that's where they belonged.

You can read the brief wikipedia article here: History of gravitational theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Note, "It would not be until Isaac Newton that the force of gravity was given proper scientific treatment and an accurate mathematical expression upon which a correct description of gravity can be deduced."

Noting that a object falls (even that it falls by something called "weight") isn't postulating gravity. That's why there were different theories about *why* objects fell.



If something is invisible, it can't be observed (unless you simply mean you're aware of it). If you have amazing superpowers and can observe invisible things, please describe to all of us what gravity looks like. What color is it?



Knew you'd like it. It's true, for the reason I listed. Dictionaries rarely give the necessary and jointly sufficient conditions to a concept. But that's exactly what persons need when persons are debating whether a thing is this or that or whether it should be called this or that or what it means for a thing to be this or that.

Take for example one dictionary's definition of free will: "1. The ability or discretion to choose; free choice: chose to remain behind of my own free will. 2. The power of making free choices that are unconstrained by external circumstances or by an agency such as fate or divine will"

Anyone who is familiar with the free-will debate in philosophy would know these are horrible definitions. And if anyone tried to appeal to these definitions to show that we have free will they'd be wasting everyone's time. Take the first definition: compatibilists say we make choices, and libertarians admit that under compatibilism persons can make choices, but they don't want to admit that compatibilism gives us free will. On the other hand, Derk Pereboom doesn't believe we have free will, but he still says we can make choices and deliberations. Now take the second definition: everyone agrees that one of the necessary conditions to free will is that we be unconstrained by external circumstances, but there is huge disagreement about whether being free of the divine will (or decree) is necessary to free will. Many persons think that we can be under the divine will or decree and still be free.

So it should be obvious that anyone who simply appeals to this dictionary (thefreedictionary.com) to sort out free will is only going to confuse themselves. It will only make it harder when they have to come to terms with philosophical definitions of free will that try to give the necessary and jointly sufficient conditions to free will.

This isn't to say that dictionaries are useless or should never be appealed to. For the most part, they record common usage of a term. So if you want to know how a word is commonly used it's a good place to go. But sometimes it's just absurd (look up the definition for "choice" and see how redundant and uninformative it is).



So if I were to push you off a building you would yell "Oh, no! I'm gravitying!!"? No… we call that falling. And we explain the falling in terms of the force called gravity.



So your claiming your definition of gravity is fall… So if I trip as I walk out the door I gravity? And you say you can observe this, but all your really observing is the effects of gravity not gravity itself.

Now, if you still want to say I'm redefining your terms, fine. Your use of the terms is absurd. No one views falling as synonymous with gravity and no one views the effect (you observing an object fall) of a thing as synonymous with the cause of a thing (gravity).



As I pointed out to you before, that's because someone claimed evolution was unproveable because it was a theory. Naturally, that will require us to understand what the word "theory" means and how it is used in order to see if it is valid. If someone said "Evolution can't be proven because it is spunkle!" don't you think we would have to understand what a spunkle is to know whether that is a valid claim and what relevance it would have to evolutionists?



I have time.
Credo, I have been looking at your recent conversation with Chris and would like to publically apologize to you for my previous conclusions. I still think you tend to look at little things that are not important, but you have more than proven that you truly have much to contribute. I realized, from the beginning that we are like water and oil and I will commit myself to avoid pointless conflict with you. If you fill this is sufficient, I will not reply point by point to this post.
 
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Credo_ut_Intelligam

Guest
#64
Credo, I have been looking at your recent conversation with Chris and would like to publically apologize to you for my previous conclusions. I still think you tend to look at little things that are not important, but you have more than proven that you truly have much to contribute. I realized, from the beginning that we are like water and oil and I will commit myself to avoid pointless conflict with you. If you fill this is sufficient, I will not reply point by point to this post.
I suppose we are like water and oil in some respects, but it has probably got more to do with my way of going about things, like you said, because I often agree with what you say (when it's not about me, of course). So I don't think our basic views are too far apart (aside from me being Reformed).

Sorry for any unnecessary conflict.
 
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giantone

Guest
#65
The atheist thinks that he is an accident.

The Christian knows that he is not.
 
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Credo_ut_Intelligam

Guest
#66
The atheist thinks that he is an accident.
Furthermore, suppose the atheist is right. If he is an accidental product of evolution, then his cognitive faculties are an accidental product of evolution. If they are an accidental product of evolution, he has no reason to believe that his beliefs correspond to reality! So the atheist who believes in evolution has no reason to think his belief in evolution is true (or any of his other beliefs for that matter).
 
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JohnKnox

Guest
#67
you do not use scientific method to DISPROVE an hypothesis but to prove it

you should have said none of these hypothesis has been proven nor can they be
Sure you can. I can disprove all kinds of stuff. You can't disprove a positive, but that's more of a metaphysical issue than a scientific one. I can disprove perpetual motion, that a submarine 200' below can be threatened by lightning, the moon is made of green cheese, trout live in trees, etc. You can even skip a few steps disproving that first one.
 
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BIGTEXATX1

Guest
#68
Credo_ut_Intelligam, thank you for your insightful comments. I,n my opinion, the true motive behind the pursuit of Evolutionary validation is not to overwhelmingly prove it as a fact. It is in fact, to disprove, discredit and downplay the concept of a malevolent creation. There is overwhelming evidence to disprove an old earth: no saturation of the atmosphere with carbon 14, carbon 12 and 14 dating methods being highly inaccurate and scientist picking and choosing what suits their agenda. Dinosaur fossil records being found to have "soft malleable tissue and remnants of red blood cells present" The fact that every "vestigial" organ cataloged in religious, "evolutionary" text books has been found to have a use at one time or another and that never has one been found to exist in fossil records. Fossil remains of plants have been found in layers of rock that (according to evolutionary sedimentary time lines) there should not have been oxygen existing on Earth at that time. If the moon where as old as they "evolutionists" say it is, the rate that it has been decaying in obit and taking into consideration a stronger gravitational pull of the earth when the moon was much closer, it should have been inside the earth for about 500 thousand years or so (give or take a few thousand years) The fact that something cannot exist without something else first existing to create it excludes the Big Bang theory all together, something had to be around to start the bang and if so what created that? No, evolution is not a concept of man alone, it is a vessel of Satan to deceive the masses and disenfranchise Christians form the creator. Most of the early pioneers of the evolutionary theory where stanch racists, they hated "lessor" people of color and looked upon them as filthy less intelligent sub human creatures. Further more, a large percentage of these "scientists" where known masons and Illuminati, Evolution dictates that there is no God, there is no over encompassing moral law that governs what is right and what is wrong, we are only animals and thus governed by our own lusts and desires. Satan the great deceiver will do all he can to lead Yahweh's children astray and his flowers on earth like these evolutionists and elitists are well obliged to help him in his quest. Stay true to what is right and true. How about the evolutionists stop trying to prove that we came from monkeys and try to stop starvation in poverty stricken counties, or better yet mandate that the governments of the world release their cures for AIDS and cancer, how about that?
 
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greatkraw

Guest
#69
You may think this, but at least I have the majority of the free-thinking, culturally developed world on my side of the argument :)

Also, wow....your use of the word "indoctrinated" is ironic at best.
you use the word majority like that is a good thing

the advice from the majority of economists got us into the current mess

apparently the majority if scientists were worried about global warming
 
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greatkraw

Guest
#70
Sure you can. I can disprove all kinds of stuff. You can't disprove a positive, but that's more of a metaphysical issue than a scientific one. I can disprove perpetual motion, that a submarine 200' below can be threatened by lightning, the moon is made of green cheese, trout live in trees, etc. You can even skip a few steps disproving that first one.

The scientific method, specifically, is designed to prove an hypothesis so that it then qualifies as a theory

this involves conducting an experiment which is predictable and repeatable

999 times edison proved that an electric light bulb was impossible
 
Dec 14, 2013
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0
0
#71
As Richard Dawkins said: (to paraphrase) 'Some people claim that there's no evidence for evolution and that is not a theory but a hypothesis. What makes it a theory, the same as gravity, is that there IS evidence.

We see evidence in genetics, in fossils, and in the correlation we see between all fields of science in our current understanding of the universe.'
 
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Crazylove

Guest
#72
I hav Two words for you............ RAY COMFORT, he use to be an atheist and has all kinds of things, his newest is this Evolution Vs. God

I also lik to track: Scientific Facts in the Bible

There's an option 2 read it online, just in case u miss it :)
 
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2Thewaters

Guest
#73
Its kind of like the theory that the moon is made of green cheese.
 
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2Thewaters

Guest
#74
There is no missing link
there are trillions of same links every year
all the time
a single mutation would be sorted against in seven generations and eliminated

they never tell you this
 
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2Thewaters

Guest
#75
If suddenly yo had purple eyes recessive
and had a child
that child would have 50 percent chance of having the gene

if the child did not get the gene, that mutation is lost forever

ok child gets purple eyes

their child would have 50 percent chance of having it or loosing it forever
and so one
eventually any mutated gene is always lost
unless it appears to a significant degree in the population already
so evolution cannot work

And they all know this full well.
and they lie on purpose
because they like to keep their jobs
 
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2Thewaters

Guest
#76
here is the reason it is impossible for life to form itself
all the top scientists know that spontaneous life is absolutely impossible because of this
but in highest level grad school they dont talk about it
I did a project and stumbled into it
I wanted to synthsize insulin molecule by sequential amino acid addition
professor told me it would not work
I thought we could solve the diabetes problem
he said it would not work
why?
Because of the Bane of the biochemist, racemic isomers
WHAT?
what is that?
we dont talk about it at all
that is why we cant just make anything we want
racemic isoners
your insulin would not work
 
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2Thewaters

Guest
#77
When we synthsize an amino acid you get two kinds
a good kind and a deadly poison kind
each amino acid beside glycine has isomers
a good kind and a deadly poison kind
same molecule same atoms totally different structure
one deadly poison and one good

every reaction does this
and manufacture of amino acid makes the same amount deadly poison and good kind
if just one deadly poison one enters the reaction the whole protein is ruined, it bends a different way and the molecule will no longer work

insulin has 72 mino acids and I had it all figured out

he said you need a good amino acid reactiing with a good number two and a good number three and a good number four and a good number five all the way to 72
and if ONE BAD ONE gets in there the molecule is dead

I thought about it and said
then we really cant make anything worthwhile can we?

he said you can
you have to take things from living structures and just change them a bit
you cannot make any biochemical proteins from scrathc

the wise professors (a few of them ) know this

they certainly do not talk about it

so I said

so evolution is impossible

yes.
evolution is impossible.

and they know it
 
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2Thewaters

Guest
#78
Yo can take this posting and show it to any organic chemist and he will verify
if he disagrees he is lying and he knows full well he is lying to you.
Evolution from a mudpuddle can in no way happen.

Psa 100:3 Know ye that the LORD he is God: it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves;
 
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2Thewaters

Guest
#80
Here is a simple representation of how difficult it is to randomly create one of the SMALLEST proteins we are made of
Inslun
about 72 amino acids they have to be in specific ordr or they will not work
and the all have to be the good Isomer only, one bad isomer and it is useless

take a swimming pool and fill it with equal amounts of red and yellow M & M's
the yellow M & M's write on each one a random number from 1 to 72 representing that amino acid type for that position
ok let the trial begin

Blindfold self

START MAKING INSULIN
From the swimming pool of red and yellow M & M's the yellow are randomly numbered 1 through 72

STEP ONE: pick a random M & M. if it is a yellow (#1) you are good, else go to step #1
If M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
If M & M is any other number yellow but one then throw all M & M's away and go to STEP ONE
STEP TWO: If it is a yellow number two (#2) you are good, put it next to #1
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#2) throw all away go to STEP ONE
STEP THREE: If it is a yellow number three (#3) you are good. Put it next to (#2)
if M & M red then throw all away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#3) throw all away go to STEP ONE
STEP FOUR: If it is a yellow number four (#4) you are good. Put it next to (#3)
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#4) throw all away go to STEP ONE
STEP FIVE: If it is a yellow number five (#5) you are good. Put it next to (#4)
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#5) throw all away go to STEP ONE
STEP Six: If it is a yellow number six (#6) you are good. Put it next to (#5)
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#6) throw all away go to STEP ONE
STEP Seven: If it is a yellow number seven (#7) you are good. Put it next to (#6)
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#7) throw all away go to STEP ONE
STEP eight: If it is a yellow number eight (#8) you are good. Put it next to (#7)
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#8) throw all away go to STEP ONE
,,,
,,,
,,,
STEP Seventy one: If it is a yellow number 71 (#71) you are good. Put it next to (#70)
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#71) throw all away go to STEP ONE
STEP Seventy two: If it is a yellow number 72 (#72) you are good. Put it next to (#71)
if M & M red then throw all M & M's away go to STEP ONE
if M & M yellow but anything beside (#72) throw all away go to STEP ONE

If you made it this far,
you have created ONE INSULIN MOLECULE!

It has taken you at 5000 Choices per second
more than 7,350,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Years
Oh sorry, the universe is over!

you have had
1.843,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 failures

and the volume of ruined molecules that failed fill all the known universe from furthest quasar in either direction
1,000,000 times with bad insulin partial molecules...

but you made ONE good insulin molecule
now the problem is
how do you find it? Where is it?

and to make a working organism you have to do this a few billion times
and that is just for insulin.
we have 15000 different protein molecules that are larger than insulin
all need to be Levo isomers....

Evolution never happened my son.

Care for an M & M?