This is from an earlier post..
But can the natural world be explained and understood only in natural terms? If so, then we must have some indication that it is possible. As an example if one was to look at the brain, how would one conclude that there was consciousness? If you looked at a chemical process in the brain could you find what someone said that day or a book that they might have read? It doesn't mean that we don't know anything about it but if you are locked into the natural explanations as the only body of knowledge and the correspondence to it as the only reality, then you are making yourself your own reality...
And what about abiogenesis? Is it natural or unnatural evidence? John Horgan, senior writer for Scientific American, has called the origin of life "the weakest strut of the chassis of modern biology." The National Academy of Sciences puts the problem in an interesting way:
“The study of the origin of life is a very active research area in which important progress is being made, although the consensus among scientists is that none of the current hypotheses has thus far been confirmed.” Science and Creationism : A view from the National Academy of sciences, 2nd ed., 1999.
According to evolutionist Dr. Paul Davies, “The origin of life is one of the great outstanding mysteries of science. Nobody knows how a mixture of non-living chemicals can transform itself into a living cell. Because they have almost nothing to go on, scientists differ sharply on how likely such a genesis event might be. Some think it happened only once in the universe - and we are the result. Others believe there is a deep principle built into the laws of nature that prompts life to form readily wherever there are Earth-like conditions.”
Statements like these still stand today.. In other words, it is fair to say that we do not know how life originated. Oh of course the belief is that "some day" perhaps we will have an answer for these things, but again this is simply conjecture. This is philosophy using some material objects but it is not "truly" empirical science.. What about the problems of abiogenesis or finding the origins of consciousness? If we could be truthful with ourselves I think a lot of these evolution/creation debates would fly away. But in hindsight, I don't really think they will.. Why? Because man is ultimately a philosophical creature.. He/she will always project their philosophical beliefs into anything.. Whether it is their religion OR science...
Science is not in the business of ultimate explanations. That's not what it does.. It works on specific things, it advances theories, but it never makes a claim about everything. But people will always make the claims. It's in our makeup..
