I'm sick of you guys parading your ignorance, Puppetmaster. You really ought to do a little research before spouting off:
Professor Henry F. Schaefer III, Ph.D.
Chair of the Center for Compuational Quantum Chemistry
Graham-Purdue Professor of Chemsitry
at the University of Georgia
Henry F. Schaefer III was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan in 1944. He received his B.S. degree in chemical physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1966) and Ph.D. degree in chemical physics from Stanford University (1969). For 18 years (1969-1987) he served as a professor of chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley. During the 1979-1980 academic year he was also Wilfred T. Doherty Professor of Chemistry and inaugural Director of the Institute for Theoretical Chemistry at the University of Texas, Austin. Since 1987 Dr. Schaefer has been Graham Perdue Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Center for Computational Quantum Chemistry at the University of Georgia. His other academic appointments include Professeur d'Echange at the University of Paris (1977) and Gastprofessur at the Eidgenossische Technische Hochshule (ETH), Zurich (1994, 1995, 1997).
He is the author of more than 800 scientific publications, the majority appearing in the Journal of Chemical Physics or the Journal of the American Chemical Society. He has been the research director of 50 successful doctoral students and has presented plenary lectures at more than 125 national or international scientific conferences. He has presented endowed or named lectures or lecture series at eighteen major universities. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the London-based journal Molecular Physics and President of the World Association of Theoretically Oriented Chemists. His service to the chemical community includes the chairmanship of the American Chemical Society's Division of Physical Chemistry (1992). His major awards include the American Chemical Society Award in Pure Chemistry (1979), the American Chemical Society Leo Hendrik Baekeland Award (1983), the Schrodinger Medal (1990), and the Centenary Medal of the Royal Society of Chemistry (London, 1992).
During the comprehensive period of 1981 - 1997 Dr. Schaefer was the sixth most highly cited chemist in the world; out of a total of 628,000 chemists whose research was cited. His research involves the use of state-of-the-art computational hardware and theoretical methods to solve important problems in molecular quantum mechanics. According to the U.S. News & World Report cover story (page 62) of December 23, 1991, Professor Schaefer is a "five-time nominee for the Nobel Prize."
http://www.q-chem.com/company/people/fritz.html
You could do a lot worse than look up to a man like that.
Nor is he an idiot. Evolution states everything biological happens by natural means via time, chance, mutations and natural selection. Given the first two requirements, time and chance, evoution necessarily requires a beginning of life. That is why there are so many experiments trying to show abiogenesis is possible, which it isn't -- experiments funded by evolutionary sources.