One of the more familiar is the typing monkeys scenario, also known as the infinite monkey theorem. It proposes that hordes of monkeys, randomly typing on typewriters with unlimited supplies of ink, time, and paper, can eventually produce a work of Shakespeare.
Dr. A. E. Wilder-Smith once clarified, the typing monkeys scenario is a false analogy. Forgetting that the monkeys will die of hunger, and ignoring the problem of sourcing unlimited paper, and omitting the inevitability of typewriter keys being ground to powder long before anything that appears intelligent can be accidently typed—the typewriters themselves must use “biochemical entropy ink,” an ink destined to disappear over time.
One such reason is entropy—the Second Law of Thermodynamics—which is the universal tendency in the real world toward a decrease in order and complexity.
Dr. A. E. Wilder-Smith once clarified, the typing monkeys scenario is a false analogy. Forgetting that the monkeys will die of hunger, and ignoring the problem of sourcing unlimited paper, and omitting the inevitability of typewriter keys being ground to powder long before anything that appears intelligent can be accidently typed—the typewriters themselves must use “biochemical entropy ink,” an ink destined to disappear over time.
One such reason is entropy—the Second Law of Thermodynamics—which is the universal tendency in the real world toward a decrease in order and complexity.
Entropy won’t go away, no matter how desperately evolutionary imaginations wish it to.
Entropy ensures that infinite time is the destroyer of accidental biomolecules, not a “savior” that preserves and then builds them from simple to complex.
Thus, eons of time guarantee that the simian keypunchers can never type out Hamlet—the imagined luck is “not to be.”
Entropy ensures that infinite time is the destroyer of accidental biomolecules, not a “savior” that preserves and then builds them from simple to complex.
Thus, eons of time guarantee that the simian keypunchers can never type out Hamlet—the imagined luck is “not to be.”
Time plus entropy prevents the spontaneous generation of life and any hope of evolution. Getting to the real truth about origins requires opening and reading the pages of Genesis."
ICR
For by Him were all things created,
ICR
For by Him were all things created,
that are in heaven, and that are in earth,
visible and invisible,...
Colossians 1:16
Colossians 1:16