Supplying unexpected assumptions
Supplying unexpected assumptions
From MS:
Let me try to see if I can extract some bites from that mouthful.
What you are really struggling to say is that the correct sequence of molecules would have to collide, and in that collision form chemical bonds so they stay together.
What is the correct sequence? The one we see in DNA today? That makes as much sense as saying the very first airplane was an Airbus A380 double-decker with all the advanced navigation and amenities in place. No, first we need just enough compatible molecules to stick together to form some kind of crude reproductive pattern that may occasionally spin off copies of itself. It has already been shown that things as simple as crystal growths in flowing water can accomplish that. Cell walls, mRNA - those are Cadillac features, not model-T Ford things. Excretion and intake - just put it where the environment itself washes the needed chemicals to it (food) and washes away waste. DNA could easily be so far ahead of the first reproducing structure that it looks like a hang glider by a Space Shuttle. Sure, there are a host of other requirements, but science has hardly found the approach of saying “wow, that’s complicated, let’s just declare it impossible and give up.” That approach is the one that is appealing to the bobbs of the world.
Supplying unexpected assumptions
From MS:
Sorry I was wrong. Oh, not on what you claim, for you would like to make me to be a fool for not realizing that science uses assumptions. No, in spite of your verbal sleight of hand, I was calling your bluff on whether you would provide such assumptions. Ah, but you did, alas. Mea culpa. (Actually I appreciate you putting the assumptions down.)You're saying that I'm bluffing that there are assumptions made in scientific theories??? I thought that was a given. That's why they put all the disclaimers on the physics tests they gave in High School like "assume that this system is removed from the universe".
You really need to practice moving the third finger of your left hand down one row on the keyboard and pressing the key. (I hope you have an American keyboard). Try it, see what happens. A little dot appears on the screen. It’s called a period, and it is immensely handy for breaking monstrous sentences like yours above into dainty understandable bites. Practice it a bunch of times.If you're going to advocate the idea that all life came from a single happenchance collision of molecules then you have to first off assume such a chance meeting, at some point in the universes history (depending on whether you see the preexisting 'seeds' for such items as already existing here on earth, in which case you'd need to present a way in which they got here and how they were initialy created, wherever that may have been, or whether you see them as for some reason defying probability on the scale of grandure of the divine).
Let me try to see if I can extract some bites from that mouthful.
Your ideas are having a problem, or maybe it’s just your terminology. Molecules do collide. Sometimes. Randomly. In nature. Even the very same ones that compose life as we know it. More than once a second. Hundreds of trillions of times a second, all over this earth, and all over the universe.If you're going to advocate the idea that all life came from a single happenchance collision of molecules then you have to first off assume such a chance meeting, at some point in the universes history …
What you are really struggling to say is that the correct sequence of molecules would have to collide, and in that collision form chemical bonds so they stay together.
What is the correct sequence? The one we see in DNA today? That makes as much sense as saying the very first airplane was an Airbus A380 double-decker with all the advanced navigation and amenities in place. No, first we need just enough compatible molecules to stick together to form some kind of crude reproductive pattern that may occasionally spin off copies of itself. It has already been shown that things as simple as crystal growths in flowing water can accomplish that. Cell walls, mRNA - those are Cadillac features, not model-T Ford things. Excretion and intake - just put it where the environment itself washes the needed chemicals to it (food) and washes away waste. DNA could easily be so far ahead of the first reproducing structure that it looks like a hang glider by a Space Shuttle. Sure, there are a host of other requirements, but science has hardly found the approach of saying “wow, that’s complicated, let’s just declare it impossible and give up.” That approach is the one that is appealing to the bobbs of the world.
This brings forth an interesting question. Is there just one unique sequence that would do the job? Early flying machines came in a variety of shapes. Do we know how many different ways the first primitive reproducing structure might have formed? The world of chemistry today (let’s say physical chemistry, just to stay away from organic molecules that we see today) is so complicated that there are thousands of chemists still probing its secrets. Not likely that of the billions of known chemical situations that have been observed in nature that only one will do the job.(depending on whether you see the preexisting 'seeds' for such items as already existing here on earth, in which case you'd need to present a way in which they got here and how they were initialy created,
Evocative phrasing, but not much good as science. One of things I would expect you to be able to show is why those astounding probabilities are stacked against evolution. In science it’s cheating when you declare the thing you are supposed to be showing.… or whether you see them as for some reason defying probability on the scale of grandure of the divine).
Stringing together lots of scientific sounding words does not constitute science. If what you are saying is that science has never successfully produced life (at least measured against what we usually define as biological life), then yeah, so what? That’s like telling a mountain climber that he can’t conquer a new peak because he has never before conquered that peak. Just a bit circular.You also have to assume that many more such happenstance occurances on a molecular and macro scale happened consistantly enough to produce changes on a scale never demonstraited in any lab or breeding expirement yet produced.