What does "just a belief" mean? Is there something more reliable than a belief?Prove that or it is just a belief.
Belief that the Earth's round, that germs cause disease and that grass is green are just beliefs, as well.
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What does "just a belief" mean? Is there something more reliable than a belief?Prove that or it is just a belief.
Something extremely light would be incinerated in the atmosphere. It's only large meteors that ever reach the ground.Something extremely light would not heat up much.
Tidal effects on debris passing near to heavy bodies could tear up and separate debris.
A tough problem. I think that the meteorites most likely to survive the trip would be iron meteorites. Very dense, very tough, very inhospitable to life:Not true. It would still have to get rid of whatever kinetic energy it has, which would be proportional to mass, meaning the heating would be similar.
More likely to allow for survival would be a larger fragment where the heat might now conduct to the interior before hitting the Earth.
Of course then there would be the issue of the life getting out of the rock in time.
Only on something planet sized. Which is very unlikely.
Overall, transfer of life via meteor is very unlikely from outside of our solar system.
Not true. It would still have to get rid of whatever kinetic energy it has, which would be proportional to mass, meaning the heating would be similar.
Overall, transfer of life via meteor is very unlikely from outside of our solar system.
I believe you are misthinking this.
On the very small scale and very long time frame everything is different. Chaos rules not the 'laws" of physics.
Large objects hitting the atmosphere collide with air molecules which impart friction to slow the object. But tiny objects may or may not collide with any given molecule. Rather than friction braking much of the braking is caused by electromagnetic forces. Total heat produced may or may not be proportionate but it is spread over a much greater area. Most viruses would experience little or no temperature change except the natural warming through conduction absorbing the sun's energy.
Life can exist inside of an object as well though most such objects would be more prone to disintegrate and burn up hitting the atmosphere.
Natural abiogenesis would be a source of life. We do have evidence for it. Do you have evidence for anything else?I might agree that it would seen so but observation would seem to suggest that it has already happened since there is no likely source of life from within our solar system and life certainly seems to be much older.
I might agree that it would seen so but observation would seem to suggest that it has already happened since there is no likely source of life from within our solar system and life certainly seems to be much older.
What does "just a belief" mean? Is there something more reliable than a belief?
Belief that the Earth's round, that germs cause disease and that grass is green are just beliefs, as well.
On the contrary, there are a number of quite reasonable proposals for life beginning on Earth. We know the raw materials were here, we know a variety of conducive conditions existed, we know that life was present early on, and we have yet to find any evidence of life anywhere else.
I'm not sure why you say it seems much older. The earliest evidence we have is for single celled life, which is to be expected.
That appears to be an irrational belief. Do you have any evidence for it?I have little doubt that life would have begun on earth given sufficient time but I believe that long before most planets are about ready for life to arise they instead are 'seeded" from outside. I believe life is ubiquitous.
The reason genes are so similar and there is so much unused DNA is that life on earth is far older than the earth itself.
And this is just a "So what?" argument. It is refuted by those two words.
It has not "been failed to be accepted as a scientific theory"
It is still in the hypothetical stage.
It has not been presented as a theory.
There are still some unanswered question
They are well over half way to having a complete hypothesis
it may graduate to theory
You are making an unreasonable demand
There is no other way, except the ludicrous way of a God ordering things to come up:
Abiogenesis actually happened, because its results are here.
Just to followup, I consider it incredibly unlikely that life was brought to Earth on a meteor from outside of our solar system.
Think of it like this. Life would have to get going on some other planet (it could not have originated on the meteor itself).
Then, it would have had to survive whatever event made the meteor from the planet ( a huge explosion of some sort).
Then, it would have had to survive for at least tens of thousands of years (and that is only for the closest stars, more likely millions of years) in space at 2.7 degrees Kelvin. This would have to be some sort of stasis.
Then it would have actually had to hit another planet (the Earth). Given the immensity of space, this is incredibly unlikely for something outside of our solar system.
Then it would have had to survive reentry into whatever atmosphere the Earth had at the time. The high temperatures of re-rentry would be an issue for something originally at 2.7K.
Then it would have had to find the environment on Earth conducive to re-emerging from stasis and surviving. In other words, the chemistry of Earth would have to match the chemistry of the organism.
Now, for travel from *within* our solar system, it is possible that the temperature doesn't get quite down to 2.7K and the likelihood of actually hitting Earth goes way, way up. But then you have the issue of abiogenesis on one of the known planets.
This should be compared to the fact that we *know* that life was present on Earth very quickly after it cooled enough to allow for liquid water, that the basic materials were here and that there were conditions that allowed for increasing complexity.
Also, be careful of the difference between *life* making such a journey and the basic chemicals of life doing so. Again, it is far more likely within the solar system, though.
So, based on everything we know, it is much, much more likely that life started here (Earth or, potentially Mars or Jupiter or one of the Jovian moons) that that it came from another star. And given what we know about the other planets in our system, Earth is, by far, the most likely place here.
And evidence showed that these organic compounds and molecules can exist naturally, or synthesize in lab experiments (eg Miller-Urey experiment, Jan Oró’s experiment).
For you to think there are no evidence only demonstrate your flawed reasoning and ignorance on the subject of Abiogenesis.
Creationism? -- just another kind of abiogenesis, but with neither a proposed mechanism nor evidence. It's a proposal of agency.
??????.
Are you seriously claiming >100 years of scientific research into abiogenesis? It's only recently we acquired the tools to research the mechanisms involved.
the only reasonable assumption, inasmuch as life did appear on a lifeless planet.
You haven't looked into this, have you?
We've observed the components of a cell forming, all that remains is the assembly mechanism.
What alternative mechanism do you propose?
Naturally created. Created by intentionless,
So, based on everything we know, it is much, much more likely that life started here (Earth or, potentially Mars or Jupiter or one of the Jovian moons) that that it came from another star. And given what we know about the other planets in our system, Earth is, by far, the most likely place here.
Due to the lack of conclusive evidence of how life may have emerged from nonliving matter on Earth, the alternative was proposed that life may have been introduced on Earth via collision with an extraterrestrial object harbouring living organisms, such as a meteorite carrying single-celled organisms.
I agree that such claim is not an answer; it would be a fallacious shift of the unresolved problem to other places where conditions might be much less suitable or even impossible to accommodate life. It’s some sort of an illogical “infinite regress” approach to keep shifting the problem back to another time/space infinitely and the original question remains unanswered.