no. thats why i believe in GodRough_ER said:Can you?
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no. thats why i believe in GodRough_ER said:Can you?
pete29 said:i ask this respectfully, can you tell me where these bacteria came from
pete29 said:no. thats why i believe in God
pete29 said:no. thats why i believe in God
Hi Hema,Hema said:Please see my post higher up; regarding the experiment I saw on National Geographic.
Seyorni said:And then there is the possibility (probability?) that new life is being generated all the time, all over the planet, if not all over the Universe. Life on Earth might be a mix of thousands of sources.
Sorry Michel. It read like sarcasm but I should have known better. Luna's got a PhD in bio also and from the sounds of it there are a lot of people here with advanced knowledge of bio, whether formal or informal. I really don't understand abiogensis. Biochem was my least favorite subject within biology.michel said:It most certainly isn't; it is the cry of an ignoramus, surrounded by people whose language he is having trouble with - and I think you do yourself an injustice by playing down your own understanding.
My point was a 'wail' of "If you say, that with your qualifications, you are not completely confident, then how is poor little me supposed to cope ?"
The people come along and talk about strings...............
Yup. For the life of me I can't understand economics, and I've tried to.lunamoth said:I get the same feeling when people start talking about finances and stock options.
lunamoth said:Maybe the answer is that conditions on earth are no longer conducive to abiogenesis.
I vaguely remember being taught that the "act" of abiogenesis changed the environment so that it was no longer conducive to it. But you and Seyorni are right that we (or at least I) tend to think of this as a once only process. "In the beginning..." And this speaks to DG's point about the limitations caused by our framing this within cause and effect.lunamoth said:Actually, this adds another problem to the abiogeneisis problem. If life is originating (and most likely almost simultaneously dying out) on this planet still...why do we not see evidence of this? Why don't we find self-replicating proto-cells? Again, I'm not saying I don't think this could happen...it's a good hypothesis and open to investigation.
Maybe the answer is that conditions on earth are no longer conducive to abiogenesis.
doppelgänger said:I think that's true under most, if not all, of the major theories I've seen proposed.
Seyorni said:Why do you think it's more likely that life arose in a far-away chemical cauldron rather than in our own planetary soup? We know very little about conditions anywhere other than on earth.
And then there is the possibility (probability?) that new life is being generated all the time, all over the planet, if not all over the Universe. Life on Earth might be a mix of thousands of sources.
I understood that you weren't talking about people forcing their views on you. My response was based on the fact that (at least from a naturalist view point) no one is arguing that matter is "motivated" by any type of sentient volition. Rocks would not "decide" anything. Sorry that my response was cryptic.pete29 said:i'm sorry my meaning was that it seems silly that matter can do things on its own. i didn't mean to imply that anyone here would force their views on me. nobody can make me believe = I can't comprehend that. Welcome to illinois hillbilly speak
lilithu said:Funny... I've gotten over that kind linear thinking with respect to the bible. I no longer think that "In the beginning" refers to a specific temporal but rather is an ontological statement. But I slipped right back into the linear here.
Yes, that's the idea I'm familiar with too.lilithu said:I vaguely remember being taught that the "act" of abiogenesis changed the environment so that it was no longer conducive to it. But you and Seyorni are right that we (or at least I) tend to think of this as a once only process. "In the beginning..." And this speaks to DG's point about the limitations caused by our framing this within cause and effect.
lil said:Funny... I've gotten over that kind linear thinking with respect to the bible. I no longer think that "In the beginning" refers to a specific temporal but rather is an ontological statement. But I slipped right back into the linear here.
lunamoth said:Me too. But there are still microenvironments that may be somewhat like the 'primordial soup.' (Eh, I'm not real thrilled with that particular phrase). Places with high temps, low oxygen, abundant hydrogen sulfide, etc..
doppelgänger said:It could simply be that small instances of such microenvironments create an infinitesimely small window of opportunity compared to the whole earth functioning that way for perhaps millions of years. The chances in any one microenvironment would be approaching zero. Multiplied by the chances that someone happened to be watching it when it abiogenisis occurred . . .
In the aggregate, a planet full of such "microenvironments" given enough time could make it inevitable.
I meant that I was assuming one point in time where this happened instead of the possibility that life might be created "from scratch" on a continuous basis. Biochemically speaking, yes there would still be a "beginning." But as Seyorni pointed out, unless one hypothesizes that the enivonment changed, there's no reason why this only happened once.lunamoth said:But there's nothing wrong with linear thinking in this case. This was posed as a question for science and this would be the way science approaches abiogenesis.
lilithu said:I meant that I was assuming one point in time where this happened instead of the possibility that life might be created "from scratch" on a continuous basis. Biochemically speaking, yes there would still be a "beginning." But as Seyorni pointed out, unless one hypothesizes that the enivonment changed, there's no reason why this only happened once.
Well as a panentheist I have no problem with the word "created." But within the context of the scripture I agree you. As Genesis starts with the spirit of God moving over water, it seems that matter already existed and what God was doing was organizing it.doppelgänger said:I always felt it was a mistake to use "Created" instead of "shaped" or "formed" in Gen. 1. The latter also has the added advantage of being more clearly consistent with the sort of thing a Word (logos) could accomplish.