Studies to Synthesise Cell in the Laboratory Support Creation - Science Magazine
Studies to Synthesise Cell in the Laboratory Support Creation
An article called “Transitions from Nonliving
to Living Matter” was published in the 13 February 2004 edition of Science
magazine. 1 Written by Steen Rasmussen of the Los
Alamos National Laboratory and his colleagues, the article dealt with theses
regarding studies of artificial life forms discussed at two international workshops.
It stated that a life form capable of synthesis in the laboratory would perhaps
be smaller than the smallest bacterium and would be quite different from any
extant or extinct form of life, and provided information about studies being
carried out to that end and the methods employed.
It should be known that studies of this kind provide no support
for the claim that life began by chance. On the contrary, such studies constitute
support for the creationist view that life emerged not by chance, but by intelligent
design. These words by William D. Stansfield, former professor of biological
sciences at California Polytechnic State University make the situation clear:
Creationists have looked forward to the day when science may
actually create a “living” thing from simple chemicals.
They claim, and rightly so, that even if such a man-made life form could be
created, this would not prove that natural life forms were developed by a
similar chemical evolutionary process.
The scientist understands this and plods on testing theories. 2
In studies to synthesise cell in laboratories it is not chance,
but a specially designed experimental environment, experts working to that end,
and technological equipment enabling suitable conditions to be maintained that
contribute to an intelligently planned and maintained process. For that reason,
if these studies are eventually successful the predictions to be confirmed will
be those of intelligent design, not of the theory of evolution which claims
that life emerged by chance and developed due to natural causes. This most important
point must be borne in mind in the evaluation of efforts to synthesise life-forms.
1. Steen Rasmussen et. al, “Transitions from Nonliving
to Living Matter,” Science, vol. 303, Issue 5660, 13 February 2004, pp.
963-965
2. William D. Stansfield, The Science of Evolution, [1977], New York: Macmillan,
1983, Eighth Printing, pp. 10-11