Originally posted by aharvey
See, that’s why I was worried that you were going to abuse the term nature. How can you possibly link the fact that environmental conditions favorable to abiogenesis are rare (“flukey�) to the denial of the supernatural?
See, that is why I purposely stopped to ask what you meant.
Well, duh! Too bad that’s not what I asked. Now how about
How about you take a valium.
articulating the differences, for all practical purposes, between “something happened, we don’t know how� and “God made something happen, and we’ll never be able to know how�?
Something is what? God is God. Something happened. God made the universe and all in it. How did He do that? Let's use science and see what we can find out.
Okay, so where do you get your information that “the scientists who are dedicating their lives to a biogenesis� have “decided science can’t make nature do it�?
I assume they can't, because if they could, it would be in the news.
Honestly, probably not. There are an incredible number of interesting things out there to explore. I don’t need to research the virtually unresearchable to satisfy my curiosity.
And some do.
Earlier in this subthread you made the statement “God created a perfect environment then placed living things into it.� If the shift in ideas between these two statements confuses you, why did you make the shift?
Me: As in: there are many environments that nothing lives at all?
You: Over the history of the earth, that's a fair statement.
Me: I don't know of any environments on earth where nothing can live.
You: So a nasty, extreme environment that can be tolerated by only a single species of microbe is part of what you refer to here: “God created a perfect environment then placed living things into it�?
Me: I don't believe one environment was around at any time to allow for only a few amino acids to form, then another environment for others, etc. God made the earth to support life, it still does, even after it was broken during the flood. The creatures we have today have adapted to their environments.
To which “belief� do you refer? The notion that the Earth is old, or the notion that the Earth’s environments have changed over time?
I asked you to please give examples of where you believe earth could not sustain life. you answered, "Pretty much anywhere on Earth, 4BYA." Then I asked why you believe that, which is where we are right now.
This seems a rather simplistic statement. Did all life before the flood have the exact same environmental requirements?
Do you mean trees and ants having the same needs to live, or do you mean trees and ants then as opposed to now?
If not, then different environments had to have been hostile to some forms of life. Or do you simply mean that each environment was perfect for the forms of life that God created for that environment?
I'll wait and answer that after I get a clear understanding of what you mean, so please include the above paragraph in your reply?
That’s not what I meant, and I think you know it. If the German experiment didn’t report their environmental conditions, how do you know their environmental conditions were different from earlier experiments?
How do you want me to answer that differently? They had a different outcome. Science is
supposed to be repeatable in a lab. Hopefully soon we will learn more about their findings.
Well your argument doesn’t make any sense unless this is true.
Huh? Because they didn't find
all the ways to make amino acids X, Y, and Z
then I am ignorant for not understanding why I know they didn't use the same experiements that made A and B amino acids? And what does this have to do with anything anyway? You are the one who reads
Nature, surely you have kept back issues? Flip through them, I'm sure you will find even more information on the topic.
I see. Different researchers used different experimental protocols to ask different questions concerning different amino acids and they got different results. From which you conclude “Science is looking for a naturalistic answer, but so far what they are finding is specialized environments for one or two amino acids at a time. They are also finding one specialized environment too hostile for other amino acids.� Do you see that this is an unsupportable jump in logic?
Not if you had read the articles. I didn't bookmark all this info, but I'm sure it's out on the net somewhere in news archives, maybe even
Nature..
Yeah, I get that part! I meant you’re drawing unsubstantiated conclusions by comparing the results of experiments as if they were looking for the same thing, which they weren’t.
Ok, if they weren't trying create amino acids and get them to "link up", then what
were they doing? If they aren't looking for a naturalistic explaination for the first "ancestor" what are they looking for? Or do you believe abiogenesis is really about finding out how God did things?
What in the world is that supposed to mean? “Dinosaur� and “bird� are just names. Words. Just because our language doesn’t have the ability to grade between one word and the next does not demonstrate that the organisms to which we subjectively apply those words are did not do so!
Words don't mean anything?