'How Life Began'
Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 1:29 pm
"The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1)
https://discussions.godandscience.org/
This article makes a valid point about the origin of life however it also has logical flaws as follows.
Oh come on, only one makes sense...you're not going to get life on a comet once it hits the earth-it will be vaporized...and you're just begging the question by moving where life evolved somewhere elseAt this point any of the following answers are equally valid.
Arrow Life came to earth on a comet.
Arrow Life came to earth on an asteroid.
Arrow God created life.
Arrow Life formed spontaneously.
Are you sure?AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:Oh come on, only one makes sense...you're not going to get life on a comet once it hits the earth-it will be vaporized...At this point any of the following answers are equally valid.
Arrow Life came to earth on a comet.
Arrow Life came to earth on an asteroid.
Arrow God created life.
Arrow Life formed spontaneously.
The origin of life on Earth is the question. One question at a time.AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:and you're just begging the question by moving where life evolved somewhere else
Yes. My first reply in that thread is particularly applicable.BGoodForGoodSake wrote:Are you sure?
Technically, you are right in that darwinian evolution doesn't have to deal with the origins question. But, if evolution is true, as its proponents claim it to be, then the same principles that govern it must also govern the origin of life. When it comes down to it, there is a general philosophical principle being put to the test: naturalism.BGoodForGoodSake wrote:The origin of life on Earth is the question. One question at a time.
"if science required one to tackle all the questions rather than one at a time the prospects would be bewildering. "
So you know the answer?
That's great but philosophy, politics, and religion should not and need not impede scientific persuits. As far as science is concerned, it is just an unanswerwed question.Jac3510 wrote:Yes. My first reply in that thread is particularly applicable.BGoodForGoodSake wrote:Are you sure?
Technically, you are right in that darwinian evolution doesn't have to deal with the origins question. But, if evolution is true, as its proponents claim it to be, then the same principles that govern it must also govern the origin of life. When it comes down to it, there is a general philosophical principle being put to the test: naturalism.BGoodForGoodSake wrote:The origin of life on Earth is the question. One question at a time.
"if science required one to tackle all the questions rather than one at a time the prospects would be bewildering. "
So you know the answer?
Don't tell me I am ruling it out, I listed it as one of the possibilities.BGoodForGoodSake wrote:KMart does believe he has the answer. It's just not found in naturalism. Your ruling it out a priori because it doesn't line up with your philosophical notions doesn't make it any more or less valid.
This sounds like a philosophical viewpoint.Jac3510 wrote:First, BGood, all three of the scientific possibilities have been systematically ruled out. You were advocating the possibility of space . . . I offered resources to the contrary.
As to the more general discussion, I have no problem with science in its purest sense. I have a proplem with naturalistic science. Science is the Christian's friend. It is your philosophy of science that is causing the problem.
Tell me then, what observations are not naturalistic?Jac3510 wrote:All science is, is the systematic gathering of observations and the organization of those facts into a workable system.
How is the ressurection of Jesus supposed to be a scientific observation? Not everything falls under science. So if the pope is shot that is a scientific observation?Jac3510 wrote: Period. It is naturalism, NOT SCIENCE, that says things like the Resurrection of Jesus isn't an observation.
How does one observe God empirically?Jac3510 wrote:It is naturalism, NOT SCIENCE, that says that God cannot be observed.
What is irreducible complexity but another way of saying we don't know yet?Jac3510 wrote:It is naturalism, NOT SCIENCE, that says that denies such ideas as irreducibility complex.
The best experiments lead to unexpected results because nothing was ruled out.Jac3510 wrote:Science = good.
Philosophical naturalism = ungood.
=)Jac3510 wrote:I typed all that in about two minutes, so if it sounds like a rant, accept my apologies. I'm on my way out the door
Evolution, not falsifiable, ID, yesIRQ Conflict wrote: @Kmart
I need to ask, is the theory of evolution 'falsifieable'? if so, how?
And is ID 'falseifiable'? if not why?
This seems to be the crux of another thread on another forum I've been chatting on, but I have very little evolutionary education (thank God) to say anythig concrete. Any info would be greatly appreciated!
God Bless!
The idea that evolution is an old one, before Darwin. Are you sure that there is no reason to reach this conclusion? From a muscle cell in a sprinter to a cell in a tobacco leaf to a protozoan the basic structure of life is the same. Animals can be grouped together in a series of more and more diverse groups which share charachteristics.AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:BGood....stop. Just stop. You're annoying "it means we just don't know yet" is rather old. We can use that with evolution too you know. We think things evolved because we don't KNOW that it couldn't have. How bout that? Have some of your own medicine.
How do you know something is irreducible?AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:If all you can do is assert this, then SILENCE! My dang. You've had plenty of time to build a devastating attack on irreducible complexity? Where is it?
Hmm? Are you saying I have no rights to post? lolAttentionKMartShoppers wrote:Where have you won and been given the right to make assertions?
You're right I don't know. Do you?AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:YOU don't know, so cut the [poop].
So if I look at a duck and a chicken, wouldn't even a child see that they are both birds? Is it not ok for me to say that maybe a zebra and a horse are related somehow?AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:And to top things off, you ask how God can be empirically observed-but how can evolution be empirically observed?
Non sequitor. You're going metaphysical. Similarity does not show common ancestry. And the idea of design ALSO goes back to the Greeks BGood...so if we can prove it's one day older...we win!The idea that evolution is an old one, before Darwin. Are you sure that there is no reason to reach this conclusion? From a muscle cell in a sprinter to a cell in a tobacco leaf to a protozoan the basic structure of life is the same. Animals can be grouped together in a series of more and more diverse groups which share charachteristics.
Dogs are like wolves. Bears, weasels and racoons share similar skull and other skeletal charachteristics. Lions cat, and hyenas share similar dentition. Mice Elephants and humans, share the placenta. Kangaroos and echidna's share hair and mamillary glands. Reptiles, Birds, Fish share vertebrae. etc.etc.
Selective memory BGood? We kinda went over this, remember? You and you're not so witty remarks?How do you know something is irreducible?
YesHmm? Are you saying I have no rights to post? lol
YesYou're right I don't know. Do you?
Non sequitor. Similarity does not infer common ancestry!So if I look at a duck and a chicken, wouldn't even a child see that they are both birds? Is it not ok for me to say that maybe a zebra and a horse are related somehow?
So what?Going even farther all animals of a certain population share the same genetic sequence for certain proteins. Other species have similar sequences. This similarity corresponds with other observations.
human logic can prove nothing, thats why we make assumptions. sometimes we're right, sometimes we're wrong, but we can't really know until we prove ourselves wrong.AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:Non sequitor. You're going metaphysical. Similarity does not show common ancestry. And the idea of design ALSO goes back to the Greeks BGood...so if we can prove it's one day older...we win!
That is not God though. So, yes, naturalism does say God does not exist.naturalism does NOT say that god cannot be observed, in fact it says the contrary. naturalists believe that if there is a god, then he can be observed because he would have to be part of the physical universe (or physically outside the universe) in order to act on it. naturalism does not exclude the supernatural, but rather says it can be explained as natural. naturalism comes down to this: the supernatural cannot be distinguished from the natural as they are both physical processes of the universe.
But axiomatic ones are ok. It's the ones that aren't self evident that must be proven. You're reading to much into it...i notice you talk a lot about how bad it is to make an assertion, and yet that is what you and i and everyone else do every time we open our mouths. you cannot communicate without making an assertion.
See? This is not axiomatic. How is evolution falsifiable?evolution is falsifiable, though i agree that there are scientists who would make it their duty to make sure it isn't. ID is falsifiable as well. the thing about the falsifiability of both of these theories is that there are so many people who blindly believe them that even if they were disproven, many would ignore it and still believe in them.
But if human logic can prove nothing, how can we prove ourselves wrong?human logic can prove nothing, thats why we make assumptions. sometimes we're right, sometimes we're wrong, but we can't really know until we prove ourselves wrong.
This is tongue in cheek.also, are you trying to say that because ID is an older theory, that it is right?