kindred
Outlander
Just wondering where intelligence and life came from in the universe. — kindred
kindred
kindred
kindred
Moliere
I just find it improbable that life could emerge on its own without some sort of divine push to get things started…what is your take on this ? — kindred
As in the emergence or jump from inanimate matter to living things (abiogenesis) could not happen by chance alone. But then we’re inevitably drawn into the argument of probability to which I’d say that the complexity of life’s building blocks such as DNA and RNA is astronomically high. — kindred
kindred
Implying that complexity cannot be the result of physical processes without at least a divine spark or push to give what does not have life some sort of complexity-forming ability that it did not previously have — Moliere
T Clark
Moliere
Abiogenesis is not an exact science and scientists have been unable to replicate the emergence of life from non life but that is not to say that it will not happen someday. This means that we’re left with naturalistic explanations that life did somehow emerge from non life through natural hit and miss chance or that there was a divine spark that set things in motion to begin with. For now the case remains wide open due to science having no answers yet in terms of replicating the jump of life from non life. — kindred
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T Clark
f it’s not random then there’s an intelligent order in the universe. The ability for the universe to organise itself would imply as much. — kindred
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T Clark
It does not represent order but a rule. And it there’s rules there gotta be a rule maker right ? — kindred
Moliere
Just boom, voila life seems a bit … well unbelievable to happen. And without any divinity it would be a magnificent deed indeed for life to emerge unaided. With divinity as explanatory power then not so much. — kindred
Perhaps I’m trying to prove God here and to me the emergence of life from non life seems to be an appealing argument.
kindred
kindred
One thing that the science does not do, however, is rule out a creator. It just has no need of one because we can synthesize the molecules of life in a lab so it doesn't seem to add anything to the explanation when chemistry will do to explain how the molecules of life formed — Moliere
Tom Storm
I just find it improbable that life could emerge on its own without some sort of divine push to get things started…what is your take on this ? — kindred
kindred
Moliere
If there were no laws to dictate how atoms behave what would there be ? Nothing I assume, well at least no matter but I’m no physicist. — kindred
Why would there be a fundamental forces of nature such as these in the universe in the first place ? Again this to me seems to point towards divinity. — kindred
What is wrong with believing in god or god and science ? — kindred
Tom Storm
What is wrong with believing in god or god and science ? — kindred
The point of the argument is to prove that god exists by way of understanding the artefacts of creation such as life and intelligence. — kindred
kindred
Arne
Tom Storm
If the yet to be explained can never be explained because it would be outside the remit of science — kindred
kindred
Does there need to be an explanation? Doesn't explantion eventually reach a terminus?
I'd put it that the theist is satisfied with the logical terminus of God, and the naturalist is satisfied with the logical terminus of nature.
But both are consistent with the science so science doesn't really rule one way or the other.
What is wrong with believing in god or god and science ?
— kindred
Nothing.
At least insofar that we recognize that this isn't where the science leads one, but is rather something we bring to the science. — Moliere
T Clark
Yet if one constant in the universe was off by the tiniest margin then the universe would be unstable. — kindred
The way I see it there are two explanations, the naturalistic one and the divine one. And the fact that life emerged into this lifeless universe enforces my view of the latter. — kindred
kindred
You can’t say something can never be explained. That claim can’t be demonstrated. At best, all you can show is that this is where the inferences lead you — Tom Storm
kindred
Neither is anything special unless we decide that they are for our own reasons. Those reasons are not the universe’s reasons — T Clark
Moliere
I see this problem as related to the question of where did everything come from. Big bang would say the naturalist without speculating any further of what existed before time and space and though there are scientific theories they cannot be proven ( such as cyclical universe, multiverse etc) — kindred
The theist would say something along the lines of god was before time and space alpha and omega etc. and it was the cause of the universe, prime mover etc.
Not sure what the naturalist would make of the prime mover argument.
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