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LIFE'S
TRUE BEGINNINGS
Lloyd
Pye (www.lloydpye.com)
Framing
The Picture
How
did life begin on Earth? More intellectual and literal
blood has been shed and spilled attempting to answer
this question than any other in any aspect of science
or religion. Why? Because the answer, if it could
be determined beyond doubt, would reveal to us the
deepest meanings behind ourselves and all that we
see around us. More importantly, it would demolish
once and for all the thorny tangle of conscious
and unconscious thought and belief that causes most
of the bloodshed.
At
present there are only two socially acceptable explanations
for how life has come to be on Earth. Science insists
it has developed by entirely natural means, using
only the materials at hand on the early planet,
with no help from any outside source, whether that
source be divine or extraterrestrial. Religion insists
with equal fervor that life was brought into existence
whole and complete by a divine Creator called by
different names by the world s various sects. Between
these two diametrically opposed viewpoints there
is no overlap, no common ground where negotiation
might be undertaken. Each considers its own position
to be totally correct and the other totally wrong,
a certainty bolstered by the fact that each can
blow gaping holes in the logic/dogma of the other.
Science
is quick to point to the overwhelming technical
proofs that life could not, and indeed did not,
appear whole and complete within the restricted
time frame outlined in the Biblical account. Of
course, people of faith are immune to arguments
based on fact or logic. Faith requires that they
accept the Biblical account no matter how dissonant
it might be with reality. Besides, they can show
that not a shred of tangible evidence exists to
support the notion that any species can transmute
itself into another species given enough time and
enough positive genetic mutations, which is the
bedrock of Charles Darwin s theory of incremental
evolution, or "gradualism."
In
the early 1800's Darwin visited the Galapagos Islands
and noticed certain species had developed distinct
adaptations for dealing with various environmental
niches found there. Finch beaks were modified for
eating fruit, insects, and seeds; tortoise shells
were notched and unnotched for high-bush browsing
and low-bush browsing. Every variation clearly remained
part of the same root stock--finches remained finches,
tortoises remained tortoises--but those obvious
modifications in isolated body parts led Darwin
to the logical assumption that entire bodies could
change in the same way over vastly more time. Voila!
Gradualism was conceived and, after gestating nearly
three decades, was birthed in 1859 with the publication
of the landmark On The Origin Of Species. Since
then Darwin and his work have been topics of intense,
usually acrimonious debate between science and religion.
The
irony of a two-party political system whose members
spend the majority of their time shooting holes
in each other s policies is that it becomes abundantly
clear to everyone beyond the fray that neither side
knows what the hell it is talking about. Yet those
standing outside the science-religion fray do not
grow belligerent and say, "You re both wrong.
An idiot can see that. Find another explanation."
No! In this emotionally charged atmosphere nearly
everyone seems compelled to choose one side or the
other, as if seeking a more objective middle ground
would somehow cause instant annihilation. Such is
the psychological toll wrought on all of us by the
take-no-prisoners attitude of the two sides battling
for our hearts and minds regarding this issue.
Facts
Will Be Facts
Because
those of faith insist on being immune to arguments
based on facts, they remove themselves from serious
discussions of how life might have actually come
to be on Earth. So if anyone reading this has a
world view based on divine revelation, stop here
and move on to something else. You will not like
(to say the least!) what you are about to read.
Nor, for that matter, will those who believe what
science postulates is beyond any valid doubt. As
it turns out, and as was noted above, neither side
in this two-party system knows what the hell it
is talking about.
To
move ahead, we must assign a name to those who believe
life spontaneously sprang into existence from a
mass of inorganic chemicals floating about in the
early Earth s prebiotic seas. Let s call them "Darwinists,"
a term often used for that purpose. Darwinists have
dealt themselves a difficult hand to play because
those prebiotic seas had to exist at a certain degree
of coolness for the inorganic chemicals floating
in them to bind together into complex molecules.
Anyone who has taken high school chemistry knows
that one of the best ways to break chemical bonds
is to heat them.
Given
that well-known reality, Darwinists quickly postulated
that the first spark of life would no doubt have
ignited itself sometime after the continental threshold
was reached around 2.5 billion years ago. At that
point land would have existed as land and seas would
have existed as seas, though not in nearly the same
shapes we know them today. But the water in those
seas would have been cool enough to allow the chemical
chain reactions required by "spontaneous animation."
So among Darwinists there arose a broad consensus
that the spontaneous animation of life had to have
occurred (again, because they do not allow for the
possibility of outside intervention, divine or extraterrestrial),
and it had to have occurred no earlier than the
continental threshold of 2.5 billion years ago.
These
assumptions were believed and taught worldwide with
a fervor that leaves religious fundamentalists green
with envy. Furthermore, they were taught as facts
because that is what science inevitably does. It
reaches a consensus about a set of assumptions in
a field it has not fully mastered, then those assumptions
are believed as dogma and taught as facts until
the real facts become known. Sometimes such consensus
"facts" endure for a short time (Isaac
Newton s assumption that the speed of light was
a relative measure lasted only 200 years), while
others endure like barnacles on the underside of
our awareness (the universe doggedly expands beyond
every finite measure given for it).
In
the same way Newton s fluctuating speed of light
was overturned by Albert Einstein s theory of relativity,
the continental threshold origin of life was blown
out of the water, so to speak, by discoveries in
the 1970's that indicated life s origins were much
older than anticipated. So old, in fact, it went
back nearly to the point of coalition, 4.5 billion
years ago, when the Sun had ignited and the protoplanets
had taken the general shapes and positions they
maintain today. Ultimately, 4.0 billion years became
the new starting point for life on Earth, based
on fossilized stromatolites discovered in Australia
that dated to 3.6 billion years old.
For
Darwinists that meant going from the frying pan
into the fire, literally, because at 4.0 billion
years ago the proto-Earth was nothing but a seething
cauldron of lava, cooling lava, and steam, about
as far from an incubator for incipient life as could
be imagined. In short, right out of the gate, at
the first crack of the bat, Charles Darwin was,
as they say in the south, a blowed-up peckerwood.
Limbo
Of The Lost
The
fossilized stromatolites discovered in Australia
had been produced by the dead bodies of billions
of prokaryotic bacteria, the very first life forms
known to exist on the planet. They are also by far
the simplest, with no nucleus to contain their DNA.
Yet in relative terms prokaryotes are not simple
at all. They are dozens of times larger than a typical
virus, with hundreds of strands of DNA instead of
the five to ten of the simplest viruses. So it is
clear that prokaryotes are extremely sophisticated
creatures relative to what one would assume to be
the very first self-animated life form, which can
plausibly be imagined as even smaller than the smallest
virus.
(By
the way, viruses do not figure into this scenario
because they are not technically "alive"
in the classic sense. To be fully alive means having
the ability to take nourishment from the immediate
environment, turn that nourishment into energy,
expel waste, and reproduce indefinitely. Viruses
need a living host to flourish, though they can
and do reproduce themselves when ensconced in a
suitable host. So it seems safe to assume hosts
precede viruses in every case.)
Needless
to say, the discovery of fossilized prokaryotes
at 3.6 billion years ago left scientists reeling.
However, because so many of their pet theories had
been overturned in the past, they knew how to react
without panic or stridency. They made a collective
decision to just whistle in the dark and move on
as if nothing had changed. And nothing did. No textbooks
were rewritten to accommodate the new discovery.
Teachers continued to teach the spontaneous animation
theory as they had been doing for decades. The stromatolites
were consigned to the eerie limbo where all OOPARTS
(out-of-place artifacts) dwell, while scientists
edgily anticipated the next bombshell.
They
didn t have to wait long. In the late 1980's a biologist
named Carl Woese discovered that not only did life
appear on Earth in the form of prokaryotes at around
4.0 billion years ago, there was more than one kind!
Woese found that what had always been considered
a single creature was in fact two distinct types
he named archaea and true bacteria. This unexpected,
astounding discovery made one thing clear beyond
any shadow of doubt: Life could not possibly have
evolved on Earth. For it to appear as early as it
did in the fossil record, and to consist of two
distinct and relatively sophisticated types of bacteria,
meant spontaneous animation flatly did not occur.
This
discovery has been met with the same resounding
silence as the stromatolite discovery. No textbooks
have been rewritten to accommodate it. No teachers
have changed what they are teaching. If you can
find a high school biology teacher that religious
fundamentalists have not yet terrorized into silence,
go to their classroom and you will find them blithely
teaching that spontaneous animation is how life
came to be on Earth. Mention the words "stromatolite"
or "prokaryote" and you will get frowns
of confusion from teacher and students alike. For
all intents and purposes this is unknown information,
withheld from those who most need to know about
it because it does not fit the currently accepted
paradigm built around Charles Darwin s besieged
theory of gradualism.
Outside
Intervention
The
ongoing, relentless assaults on gradualism by religious
fundamentalists is the principle reason scientists
can t afford to disseminate these truths through
teaching. If fundamentalists would keep their opinions
and theories inside churches, where they belong,
scientists would be far more able (if not inclined)
to acknowledge where reality does not coincide with
their own theories. But because fundamentalists
stand so closely behind them, loudly banging on
the doors of their own bailiwick, schools, scientists
have no choice but to keep them at bay by any means
possible, which includes propping up an explanation
for life s origins that has been bankrupt for more
than two decades.
Another
reason scientists resist disseminating the truth
is that it would so profoundly change the financial
landscape for many of them. Consider the millions
and billions of tax dollars and foundation grants
that are spent each year trying to answer one question:
Does life exist beyond Earth? The reality of two
types of prokaryotes appearing suddenly, virtually
overnight, at around 4.0 billion years ago provides
overwhelming testimony that the answer is "Yes!"
Clearly life could not have spontaneously animated
from inorganic chemicals in seas comprised of seething
lava rather than relatively cool water. So billions
of dollars of funding would vanish if scientists
ever openly conceded that life must have come to
Earth from somewhere else because it obviously could
not have originated here.
A
third reason scientists avoid disseminating this
knowledge is that spontaneous animation is a fundamental
tenet of their corollary theory of human evolution.
As with life in general, scientists insist that
humanity is a product of the same protracted series
of gradual genetic mutations that they feel produced
every living thing on Earth. And, again, all this
has been done by natural processes within the confines
of the planet, with no outside intervention of any
kind, divine or extraterrestrial. So, if spontaneous
animation goes out the window, then the dreaded
specter of outside intervention comes slithering
in to take its place, and that idea is so anathema
to scientists they would rather deal with the myriad
embarrassments caused by their blowed-up icon and
his clearly bankrupt theory.
So
What Is The Answer?
Life
came to Earth from somewhere else--period. It came
to Earth whole and complete, in large volume, and
in two forms that were invulnerable to the most
hostile environments imaginable. Given those proven,
undeniable realities, it is time to make the frightening
mental leap that few if any scientists or theologians
have been willing or able to make: Life was seeded
here! There...it s on the table...life was seeded
here.... The Earth hasn t split open. Lightening
bolts have not rained down. Time marches on. It
seems safe to discuss the idea further.
If
life was actually seeded here, how might that have
happened? By accident....or (hushed whisper) deliberately?
Well, the idea of accidental seeding has been explored
in considerable detail by a surprising number of
non-mainstream thinkers and even by a few credentialed
scientists (British astronomer Fred Hoyle being
perhaps the most notable). The "accidental
seeding" theory is called panspermia, and the
idea behind it is that bacterial life came to Earth
on comets or asteroids arriving from planets where
it had existed before they exploded and sent pieces
hurtling through space to collide some millennia
later with our just-forming planet.
A
variation of this theory is called directed panspermia,
which replaces comets and asteroids with capsules
launched by alien civilizations to traverse space
for millennia and deliberately home in on our just-forming
planet. However, the idea of conscious direction
from any source beyond the confines of Earth is
as abhorrent to science as ever, so directed panspermia
has received little better than polite derision
from the establishment. But for as blatantly as
undirected panspermia defies the scientific tenet
that all of life begins and ends within the confines
of Earth, it is marginally acceptable as an alternative
possibility. There have even been serious, ongoing
attempts to try to determine if the raw materials
for life might be found in comets.
The
point to note here is that no one wants to step
up to the plate and suggest the obvious, which is
that some entity or entities from somewhere beyond
our solar system came here when it was barely formed
and for whatever reason decided to seed it with
two kinds of prokaryotes, the hardiest forms of
bacteria we are aware of and, for all we know, are
creatures purposefully designed to be capable of
flourishing in absolutely any environment in the
universe. (Understand that prokaryotes exist today
just as they did 4.0 billion years ago...unchanged,
indestructible, microscopic terminators with the
unique ability to turn any hell into a heaven. But
more about that in a moment.)
If
we take the suggested leap and accept the notion
of directed-at-the-scene panspermia, we are then
confronted with a plethora of follow-up questions.
Were all of the planets seeded, or just Earth? Why
Earth? Why when it was a seething cauldron? Why
not a couple billion years later, when it was cooled
off? Good questions all, and many more like them
can be construed. But they all lead away from the
fundamental issue of why anyone or (to be fair)
anything would want to bring life here in the first
place, whether to the proto-Earth or to any other
protoplanet? And this brings us to the kicker, a
question few of us are comfortable contemplating:
Is Earth being deliberately terraformed?
Welcome
To The Ant Farm
The
concept of terraforming does indeed conjure up images
from the recent movie "Antz." Nevertheless,
for all we know that is exactly what we humans--and
all other life forms, for that matter--are, players
on a stage that seems immense to us, but (visualize
the camera pulling back at the end of "Antz")
in reality is just a tiny orb swirling through the
vastness of a seemingly infinite universe. An unsettling
and even unlikely scenario, but one that has to
be addressed. Well, so what? What if we are just
bit players in a cosmic movie that has been filming
for 4.0 billion years? As long as we are left alone
to do our work and live our lives in relative peace,
where is the harm in it?
Is
this fantastic notion really possible? Is it even
remotely plausible? Consider the facts as we know
them to be, not what we are misled into believing
by those we trust to correctly inform us. The simple
truth is that life came to our planet when it (Earth)
had no business hosting anything but a galactic-level
marshmallow roast. The life forms that were brought,
the two prokaryotes, just happen to be the simplest
and most durable creatures we are aware of. And,
most important of all, they have the unique ability
to produce oxygen as a result of their metabolic
processes.
Why
oxygen? Why is that important? Because without an
oxygen-based atmosphere life as we currently know
it is impossible. Of course, anaerobic organisms
live perfectly well without it, but they would not
make good neighbors or dinner companions. No, oxygen
is essential for complex life as we know it, and
quite possibly is necessary for higher life forms
everywhere. If that is the case, if oxygen is the
key ingredient for life throughout the universe,
then from a terraformer s perspective bringing a
load of prokaryotes to this solar system 4.0 billion
years ago begins to make a lot of sense.
Let
s put ourselves in their shoes (or whatever they
wear) for a moment. They are a few million or even
a few billion years into their life cycle as a species.
Space and time mean nothing to them. Traversing
the universe is like a drive across Texas to us...a
bit long but easily doable. So as they travel around
they make it a point to look for likely places to
establish life, and 4.0 billion years ago they spot
a solar system (in this case ours) forming off their
port side. They pull a hard left and take it all
in. At that point every protoplanet is as much a
seething cauldron as the proto-Earth, so they sprinkle
prokaryotes on all of them in the hope that one
or more will allow them to flourish.
What
the terraformers know is that if the prokaryotes
ultimately prevail, then over time trillions of
them will produce enough oxygen to, first, turn
all of the cooling planet s free iron into iron-oxide
(rust). Once that is done...after, say, a billion
years (which, remember, means nothing to the terraformers)...oxygen
produced by the prokaryotes will be free to start
saturating the waters of the seas and the atmosphere
above. When enough of that saturation occurs (say,
another billion years), the terraformers can begin
to introduce increasingly more complex life forms
to the planet.
This
might include, for example, eukaryotes, Earth s
second life form, another single-celled bacteria
which clearly appeared (rather than evolved) just
as suddenly as the prokaryotes at (surprise!) around
2.0 billion years ago. Eukaryotes are distinctive
because they are the first life form with a nucleus,
which is a hallmark of all Earth life except prokaryotes.
We humans are eukaryotic creatures. But those second
immigrants (which, like prokaryotes, exist today
just as they did when they arrived) were much larger
than their predecessors, more fragile, and more
efficient at producing oxygen.
After
establishing the first portion of their program,
the terraformers wait patiently while the protoplanet
cools enough for "real" life forms to
be introduced. When the time is right, starting
at around half a billion years ago, higher life
forms are introduced by means of what today is called
the "Cambrian Explosion." Thousands of
highly complex forms appear virtually overnight,
males and females, predators and prey, looking like
nothing alive at present. This is what actually
happened.
The
terraformers continue to monitor their project.
They notice Earth suffers periodic catastrophes
that eliminate 50% to 90% of all higher life forms.
(Such mass extinction events have in fact occurred
five times, the last being the Cretaceous extinction
of 65 million years ago, which wiped out the dinosaurs).
They wait a few thousand years after each event
while the planet regains its biotic equilibrium,
then they restock it with new plants and animals
that can make their way in the post-catastrophe
environment. (This, too, is actually borne out by
the fossil record, which scientists try to explain
away with a specious addendum to Darwinism called
"punctuated equilibrium.")
For
as outrageous as the above scenario might seem at
first glance, it does account for the real, true,
literal evidence much better than either Darwinism
or Creationism ever have...or ever will. This produces
the bitterest irony of the entire debate. With pillars
of concrete evidence supporting outside intervention
as the modus for life s origins on Earth, the concept
is ignored to the point of suppression in both scientific
or religious circles. This is, of course, understandable,
because to discuss it openly might give it a credibility
neither side can afford at present. Both have their
hands quite full maintaining the battle against
each other, so the last thing either side wants
or needs is a third wheel trying to crash their
party. However, that third wheel has arrived and
is rolling their way.
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