The Mathematical Barrier to Spontaneous Nucleotide Sequencing
The core of the argument against the sufficiency of random mutation and natural selection often centers on the staggering scale of combinatorial space. When considering a sequence of 100 nucleotides, the number of possible arrangements is 4^{100}. To put that into perspective, 4^{100} is approximately 1.6 times 10^{60}. This figure dwarfs the estimated number of atoms in the Earth and suggests that even over billions of years, the probability of a specific, functional 100-base sequence emerging through purely stochastic shuffling is effectively zero. The standard evolutionary rebuttal to this "infinite monkey theorem" problem is cumulative selection. The concept, popularized by Richard Dawkins’s Weasel program, suggests that the environment does not wait for a perfect 100-unit sequence to appear all at once. Instead, it preserves small, beneficial changes, locking in progress step by step. However, a rigorous mathematical critique suggests that cumulative selectio...