Came across this little gem a bit ago and thought I'd share.

Thoughts?
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Moderator: Moderators
Why should I bother when you refuse to accept one of the basic precepts in the investigation of evolution: First cause is of no concern.We_Are_VENOM wrote: ↑Sun Aug 16, 2020 2:34 pmIt is fine if you didn't understand what I meant when I said "on atheism", but I said much more than that...and I explained my position as to why the truth value of abiogenesis is fundamental to any belief in evolution (on atheism).
So, please address my explanation as to why it is fundamental, instead of dismissing it and using the typical "you just don't understand evolution" quip that seems to be the evolutionist "go to" line when it comes to discussing this subject.
This wasn't directed at me, but why are you repeating this logically flawed idea and then trying to use it to support a position? Evolution can exist whether or not a god of any kind exists. It only describes how life diversifies and has nothing to do with gods or how life originated to begin with. As long as you keep clinging to this demonstrably fasle premise you won't get anywhere with trying to support your argument because you are basing it on an incorrect definition of evolution that you have just made up willy nilly (although many theists try this same argument for some strange reason ... despite there being no ambiguity on this issue).If God doesn't exist, then evolution is false.
If your position is "God does not exist", then please explain how life originated naturally from nonliving material.
If you can't do that, then you don't have a viable theory for evolution.
You're right, there is nothing superstitious about it at all. All you need to do is investigate the mechanism of natural selection and you should be able to understand how it can occur without the need for any God-magic. If you want voodoo, check out the Bible for how to cure a leprous house.We_Are_VENOM wrote: ↑Sun Aug 16, 2020 11:29 am Sure, and nothing is superstitious about a reptile evolving into a bird (voodoo), a once land dwelling mammal migrating to the sea and evolving into a aquatic animal (voodoo), and dead, inanimate matter suddenly and/or gradually coming to life and beginning to talk, think, and have sex (voodoo).
But none of that is superstitious, though. Nothing at all.
Ok, so using natural selection, explain to me how a reptile evolved into a bird. Explain it to me first, and then lets go to a lab and and conduct some experiments so we can see how it works (you know, actual science).brunumb wrote: ↑Sun Aug 16, 2020 6:30 pm You're right, there is nothing superstitious about it at all. All you need to do is investigate the mechanism of natural selection and you should be able to understand how it can occur without the need for any God-magic. If you want voodoo, check out the Bible for how to cure a leprous house.
No, but I am glad you responded. Because based on your username, I can safely assume that you take the position "There is no gods", which is exactly what I needed
Ok, so we can nip this in the bud easily with one question..
I am not ignoring the rest of your post, but we are going to nip this in the bud if you can please answer my simple yes/no question above.DrNoGods wrote: ↑Sun Aug 16, 2020 5:42 pm It only describes how life diversifies and has nothing to do with gods or how life originated to begin with. As long as you keep clinging to this demonstrably fasle premise you won't get anywhere with trying to support your argument because you are basing it on an incorrect definition of evolution that you have just made up willy nilly (although many theists try this same argument for some strange reason ... despite there being no ambiguity on this issue).
There are several hypotheses concerning how life may have originated on this planet naturally without any god interventions (eg. the Oparin-Haldane hypothesis, the RNA World hypothesis, other abiogenesis schemes, panspermia, etc.). None of them have been shown to be correct yet, but they also cannot be ruled out. This is an unsolved scientific problem and there are many others (dark matter, dark energy to name just two). Just because a problem has not been solved yet does not mean that the default answer is therefore "god did it." The correct description of the origin of life question is that is an open scientific problem, and that fact does not negate evolution or have anything to do with evolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abiogenesis
You'd be more convincing if you accept evolution for what it can genuinely explain and not try to create arbitrary definitions for what you think it should explain. Mechanism for the origin of life is not the job of evolution to explain, and whatever that mechanism is has no bearing on the validity of evolution as a theory for how life diversifies on this planet.
As I stated in my earlier post, abiogenesis is one of several hypotheses on how life may have arisen on this planet, and there are several different mechanisms under the abiogenesis umbrella. Since these are all hypotheses they are open scientific problems that are being investigated. There is no conclusion yet, so they are no more a "fact" than the idea that a god being of some sort simply "created" things from nothing via magic and miracles. There is zero evidence for that mechanism, despite many religions having similar creation myths.The question is; is abiogenesis a brute fact of nature, that life can arise from nonliving material. Is this contention/idea/concept a fact?
Yes or no?
I've shared this link before - a simple introduction to the topic of evolution:We_Are_VENOM wrote: ↑Sun Aug 16, 2020 7:52 pmOk, so using natural selection, explain to me how a reptile evolved into a bird. Explain it to me first, and then lets go to a lab and and conduct some experiments so we can see how it works (you know, actual science).
Oh, I forgot. "It doesn't work like that". Of course it doesn't. It doesn't work at all.
Ok, so after reading through what was SUPPOSED to be a yes/no answer, it looks as if your answer is "NO", abiogenesis is NOT a brute fact. And that is all I needed, because with that answer, you've placed yourself in a difficult corner to get out of.DrNoGods wrote: ↑Sun Aug 16, 2020 8:40 pm [Replying to We_Are_VENOM in post #76]
As I stated in my earlier post, abiogenesis is one of several hypotheses on how life may have arisen on this planet, and there are several different mechanisms under the abiogenesis umbrella. Since these are all hypotheses they are open scientific problems that are being investigated. There is no conclusion yet, so they are no more a "fact" than the idea that a god being of some sort simply "created" things from nothing via magic and miracles. There is zero evidence for that mechanism, despite many religions having similar creation myths.The question is; is abiogenesis a brute fact of nature, that life can arise from nonliving material. Is this contention/idea/concept a fact?
Yes or no?
This is the nature of all open scientific problems. One or more hypotheses are presented, and they are investigated via observations, measurements, experiments, analysis, etc. until there is either confirmation of the hypothesis, rejection because it has been shown to be incorrect, or it remains an open problem and work continues. This is where abiogenesis is at the moment, because a specific mechanism has yet to be confirmed. But there is no reason to believe that simple life forms could not arise from nonliving material in the presence of air, water, UV light, chemicals of all types and their reactions in the environment they find themselves, etc. That is, abiogenesis has NOT been shown to be impossible. Therefore, it is still on the table as is panspermia.
But again, this has nothing whatsoever to do with evolution since evolution makes no statements on HOW life originated, and it does not depend in any way on that mechanism. Abiogenesis can be debated as a separate issue, but it has nothing to do with evolution being viable or not.
Ok, so you have all of the ingredients, right? You have your air, water, UV light, chemicals...and you can get it to create all kinds of reactions in their environments...now, where is that sentient life at?But there is no reason to believe that simple life forms could not arise from nonliving material in the presence of air, water, UV light, chemicals of all types and their reactions in the environment they find themselves, etc
Stop right there!!! Stop!! Halt!! Did you see what just happened? Did you catch it? I doubt you did, because it happened so fast, you didn't even see it. Do you realize what just happened? Here is what happened..