My questions to those who believe god created all life is:
- If such an endeavor is successful would the fact that the creation of life is no longer the province of god be of any significance?
What impact, if any, would it have on your faith?
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Well, I'm not a believer, but I think your post deserves a response - so here are my thoughts...Miles wrote:I just finished watching a two-hour show on the History International Channel called, "How Life Began." At the end of the program they talked about the on-going efforts to create life in the laboratory out of organic elements.
My questions to those who believe god created all life is:
- If such an endeavor is successful would the fact that the creation of life is no longer the province of god be of any significance?
What impact, if any, would it have on your faith?
I think that the creation of life in a test tube would present a very major hurdle for those creationists who believe that only a god can "breathe" life into a being. Life is a complex chemical reaction, so we will be able to copy it eventually.Miles wrote:I just finished watching a two-hour show on the History International Channel called, "How Life Began." At the end of the program they talked about the on-going efforts to create life in the laboratory out of organic elements.
My questions to those who believe god created all life is:
- If such an endeavor is successful would the fact that the creation of life is no longer the province of god be of any significance?
What impact, if any, would it have on your faith?
If life can be created from organic elements under a simulated natural environment, then life is certainly being created under the same or similar natural circumstances somewhere on the earth today -- as well as on an untold number of other planets which have yet to be discovered.Miles wrote:I just finished watching a two-hour show on the History International Channel called, "How Life Began." At the end of the program they talked about the on-going efforts to create life in the laboratory out of organic elements.
Big deal! In my opinion it will be a great discovery, as life should occur under similar situations anywhere in our universe or other universes. Which greatly magnifies the wonders of God's creation.Miles wrote:Big deal or not?
Even as I am an atheist, I see the significance. It takes one more gap out of the "god of the gaps" science. There would be a huge controversy at first, but it would eventually be accepted, except for fringe groups. Once the Catholic Church accepts it, the controversy's days are numbered.Miles wrote:If such an endeavor is successful would the fact that the creation of life is no longer the province of god be of any significance?