We're talking about physical, chemical, and biological processes and how they relate to each other. In what way is that not a scientific question? — T Clark
How do you know it's not? — T Clark
not — Wayfarer
Why complicate a simple understanding with unnecessary decoration? — T Clark
You didn't answer my question. Are you denying that life is a physical, chemical, and biological process? — T Clark
But we're not talking about a Beethoven symphony. We're talking about physical, chemical, and biological processes and how they relate to each other. In what way is that not a scientific question? — T Clark
It sounds like you already know. Atoms self-organised into molecules, molecules self-organised into cycles, cycles self-organised into systems, complex systems self-organised into cells and cell groups. Cell groups self-organised into tissues, tissues self-organised into organs, organs self-organised into organisms. Whalla, here we both are. — MikeL
It was a thousand monkey typing of typewriters that inevitably created Shakespeare. The successful combinations of atoms, molecules, cycles, systems, cells, tissues, organs and organisms was fated given enough time. There is no need to invoke composers of symphonies to account for the music. But don't you feel that maybe, you're not getting the whole picture T Clark? — MikeL
Can the OP be reduced to an hypothesis, such as:
1) Life evolves from non-life, or
2) Inanimate matter creates conscious agency.
Assuming the hypothesis makes sense by definition (which is doubtful in the case of the two examples provided above), can an experiment be designed to test the hypothesis?
If not, the OP poses a conceptual, not empirical, question. — Galuchat
Did you click the link and read the article? — Metaphysician Undercover
This argument goes two ways. It is impossible to have a simple understanding when the thing to be understood is complex. The "simple understanding" is necessarily a misunderstanding when the thing is complex. — Metaphysician Undercover
Have you never considered the non-physical, immaterial aspect of life, all those things in your mind which are immaterial? — Metaphysician Undercover
Exactly how do you test without a human mind intervention? One must take the fantastical view that the mind is an illusion, testing is an illusion, and somehow consciousness erupts without the illusion.
This "likely scenario" is predicted on some fantasy of what the mind must be. But if course it all seems reasonable if one doesn't ruminate on what is precisely being proposed. It creates a new category that subsumes the miraculous. — Rich
Inanimate matter interacted through (currently) unknown processes to create a substance/organism we would classify as alive. — T Clark
In the meantime, the idea that such a thing happened and will happen again is fantastical, and reserved for those with great faith in the ability if chemicals to magically come together, create a mind, and then start arguing with themselves - of course without any purpose. It is quite literally greater than a miracle, and reserved for those who can believe in such a tale. — Rich
Sure, but we are talking about an historic event, a fact - the time the first non-living matter became animate. It happened sometime about 3.5 billion years ago. The matter changed in ways that were physical and chemical to become biological. Matter, energy, cells, organisms - these are material things I deal with everyday. Why do I need to consider non-material factors? I'm willing to if you give me a reason. — T Clark
Why do you describe this event as "non-living matter became animate"? Why would you not describe this in the way that biological science actually understands it, as the coming into existence of living matter? When you describe it in the appropriate way, then the question is where did living matter come from, not how did inanimate matter become living. — Metaphysician Undercover
And since we know that there is an immaterial aspect of life, which is exemplified by the creative faculty known as free will, it is very easy to answer the question. The living matter was created by the immaterial aspect of life. — Metaphysician Undercover
But I don't think you'll listen to me. You cannot fathom the immaterial, so you'll keep asking the impossible question to answer, how matter changed from being inanimate to animate. It's impossible to answer because it didn't happen. So you won't ever ask the real question, the interesting question of how living things create matter, because you're afraid of the immaterial and will not face the reality of the immaterial. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe it is helpful to fully digest the Scientific Genesis story: A soup of chemicals came together and spontaneously created all life that we see, feel, and acts. Everything. — Rich
I mean it has been 65 years since Miller and Urey produced some amino acids by zapping a flask of methane, ammonia and other basic compounds with "primordial lightning". — apokrisis
Well, no. We don't know that there is an immaterial aspect of life. You believe that but I don't. — T Clark
I do listen to you, I just don't agree with you. — T Clark
I don't understand the distinction you're trying to make - "non-living matter became animate" vs. "the coming into existence of living matter." — T Clark
Why do you need to attribute negative motivation to my disagreement with you? — T Clark
Everyone needs to really ruminate over the scientific Genesis story. I mean really digest it fully. There is no tale ever told that is more fantastic. — Rich
But chemistry can also model the emergent or self-organising behaviour of systems that are not at equilibrium. Or even better, are active dissipative structures. — apokrisis
Sorry, I didn't mean to insult you, but you had disclosed your prejudice. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, do you have faith or do you actually have some evidence for Spontaneous Everything? — Rich
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