science does not know the cause of life. — Wayfarer
It's germane, given the topic. Any number of insoluble problems might be solved "one day". The idea that this is something that science might solve "one day" already embodies assumptions about the kind of issue it is. — Wayfarer
I think it is likely that the life began as the result of relatively mundane physical and chemical processe — T Clark
As I said to BitterCrank in an earlier post, I think it is likely that the life began as the result of relatively mundane physical and chemical processes. Unsolved is not the same as insoluble. — T Clark
science does not know the cause of life. — Wayfarer
Without a shred of evidence to support such an assumption, one can classify this as faith - which is fine as long as it is understood that this is all that science offers. At least it provides insight into the nature of faith: unremitting hope followed by a strong belief. — Rich
Sure! It's just a matter of finding The Right Stuff! Give me the atomic table, and lab, and I'll show you how simple it is. So likely as to be almost trivial.
not — Wayfarer
I have read discussions of self-organizing minerals and speculation that these could have a role in the transition from non-living to living. Those speculations seem plausible. — T Clark
How do you know it's not? Why wouldn't it be? Why would you expect that a common phenomenon of nature such as life would have to have an exotic explanation? — T Clark
'“It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure.” - Albert Einstein — Wayfarer
Again forest for the trees. By skipping over intentionality or directional design and simply observing what you can measure, you miss the whole show. — MikeL
Evidence of what? Are you denying that life is a physical, chemical, and biological process? — T Clark
How is what matters and what I want to know. — T Clark
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.