Bestcorp: The number I used in my example were wrong, plain and simple. They were there to illustrate a point as poorly as Rusky is illustrating his.
Using your statistics, versus the actual number of star systems that are
currently known to exist, the chances actually get a lot better than 1:1. However, your numbers are jut as made up as my own (unless you've got a link to a peer reviewed article, which I sure as hell couldn't find)
And since modern man appeared, we've done our damn well best to eat or wear everything else that moves. That's a pretty weak argument. As it is, a number of species ARE adapting to changed environments, they just happen to be shorter lives species that have enough generations to be able to change at the current pace. Flying insects are the most obvious example, with many changing their once bright colours for muted greys, to camouflage in city environs.
Erect: I'm sticking with #3.
Considering we can bring dead people back to life with a zap of electricity using a defibrillator, it seems logical enough that organic compounds can be brought to life by a stroke of lightning on a pond... and then adapt to absorb more sunlight, absorb more water, and eventually start absorbing each other in more and more interesting ways.
Explanations #1 and #2 require the question of "Well, what created the creator?".
Rusky: You are either smoking something, stupid, or just willfully ignorant.
What part of
human flesh turning into cutaneous horns due to a virus doesn't sound like a new trait? You know many people with horns? I sure as hell don't. That sounds pretty fucking new in the human genome to me.
Dede the "tree man", go look him up.
Than her Majesty that your official state religion worships the Queen as the representative of God

(chillax, a lot of my friends are CoE)