I used to be evolutionist, and an atheist, but that's changed over the years.
Evolution does seem to make sense, but once I started studying more, I realized it contradicts itself by The Second Law of Thermodynamics, Entropy to be more specific.
Entropy is described as:
en·tro·py ( P ) Pronunciation Key (ntr-p)
n. pl. en·tro·pies
Symbol S For a closed thermodynamic system, a quantitative measure of the amount of thermal energy not available to do work.
A measure of the disorder or randomness in a closed system.
A measure of the loss of information in a transmitted message.
The tendency for all matter and energy in the universe to evolve toward a state of inert uniformity.
Inevitable and steady deterioration of a system or society.
Everything in our life, post-Big Bang is decaying. The 'natural order' of things is to decay. But what Evoultion won't account for, is it requires a system that gets
better over time. One that has more information being put into it, to become adapted. For some reason, we've become smarter, while other animals' intelligence remains constant. Why are we getting more efficient though? Where's all the extra information for our DNA coming from?
The next problem I ran into was how we come together to begin with. Our bodies have cells in them. In the cells are DNA, and within the DNA strand is 20 amino acid chains. These have to be a certain exact pattern to work right. If even one is off, it could turn out to be something entirely different.
20p = 2432902008176640000 possible combinations (I believe I did this right). That means the chance of your DNA being as it is, has a once in chance probability out of the number above.
That bassically contradicts the other definition of Entropy, that order cannot come from disorder.
Lets say you have a glass tube filled with red + blue sand, both perfectly seperate. If you shake it enough, what are the chances they will mix almost entirely? 100%.
If you keep shaking, what are the chances that both colors will be come perfectly seperated again? 0%
But Evolution needs this to work.
At it's most detailed view, Evolution still needs a "motivation" behind it. A reason for all components to come together perfectly, in a world where everyday physics state it's a near impossibility. If Evolution is how we got to be the way we are today, the idea of a "god" simply must be applied for it to make sense. Otherwise, "it just is", and in Science, that's not an acceptable answer. Evolution is like taking a huge gamble, and winning every single time, with not one miss. Any hardcore Evolutionist can admit (if they are well versed on it) that it doesn't make sense, compared to the world around us. And even Darwin died a Christian.
