CharonY Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, Luc Turpin said: have difficulty expressing myself clearly, and I believe this may be contributing to misunderstandings. Regarding abiogenesis, I disagree with the claim that it is not widely accepted as a demonstrated fact. For example, one forum member insisted that I acknowledge it as a fact I do not know which post you are referring to, but that does not support your assertion that it: 2 hours ago, Luc Turpin said: is widely accepted as a demonstratable fact is limiting the scope of scientific research As you refer to research, I assume you mean the scientific community. And your evidence is a post on an anonymous forum. This not a matter of expressing yourself, it is a matter of you assuming things. To put it differently, currently we do not have viable alternatives to abiogenesis (that I am aware of) but we have plenty of competing hypotheses within. And in the scientific community none of them are considered to be demonstrated.
Luc Turpin Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Based on the available evidence, the leading hypothesis is that life originated from matter. However, even with this evidence, we cannot categorically rule out the possibility that life could have emerged alongside matter, despite the implications of this idea. Life as an event in of itself and not a consequence of matter. While it is not the leading theory, it remains a possibility that cannot be dismissed at this point in time. -1
exchemist Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) 33 minutes ago, CharonY said: I do not know which post you are referring to, but that does not support your assertion that it: As you refer to research, I assume you mean the scientific community. And your evidence is a post on an anonymous forum. This not a matter of expressing yourself, it is a matter of you assuming things. To put it differently, currently we do not have viable alternatives to abiogenesis (that I am aware of) but we have plenty of competing hypotheses within. And in the scientific community none of them are considered to be demonstrated. It seems to me that since abiogenesis is merely a term for the emergence of life by natural means from prebiotic chemistry, however that may have occurred, the only alternative to abiogenesis would be emergence by non-natural means. In other words by some kind of intervention by a supernatural agency - which would be excluded from science on principle. That is why I asked @Luc Turpin to agree abiogenesis is a fact, something he refused to do. Edited 5 hours ago by exchemist
CharonY Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 16 minutes ago, exchemist said: It seems to me that since abiogenesis is merely a term for the emergence of life by natural means from prebiotic chemistry, however that may have occurred, the only alternative to abiogenesis would be emergence by non-natural means. In other words by some kind of intervention by a supernatural agency - which would be excluded from science on principle. I think that would be true for the most part. Especially form a biological and chemical perspective. I suspect that in some of the more abstract physics there might be an alternative way of thinking about it, but I honestly don't know and have never heard of an example of such thinking. However, 22 minutes ago, Luc Turpin said: However, even with this evidence, we cannot categorically rule out the possibility that life could have emerged alongside matter, despite the implications of this idea. Life as an event in of itself and not a consequence of matter. this is not such not such an example as it just stipulates something without even explaining how that could be.
exchemist Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 43 minutes ago, CharonY said: I think that would be true for the most part. Especially form a biological and chemical perspective. I suspect that in some of the more abstract physics there might be an alternative way of thinking about it, but I honestly don't know and have never heard of an example of such thinking. However, this is not such not such an example as it just stipulates something without even explaining how that could be. Agreed on the second part of course. Regarding the first, even if abstract physics were to come up with some new principle that could be shown to play a role, that would still be a natural principle, not a supernatural one. As such it would be a part of a model of abiogenesis, rather than anything beyond it.
Luc Turpin Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 3 hours ago, exchemist said: Agreed on the second part of course. Regarding the first, even if abstract physics were to come up with some new principle that could be shown to play a role, that would still be a natural principle, not a supernatural one. As such it would be a part of a model of abiogenesis, rather than anything beyond it. Abiogenesis is not about life arising from natural principles, but rather life emerging from matter. Therefore, if a natural principle did not involve matter, it would not be considered abiogenesis." -2
zapatos Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 4 hours ago, Luc Turpin said: we cannot categorically rule out the possibility that life could have emerged alongside matter What in the fuck are you talking about? Look up the definition of 'life'. Any version of the definition you wish to use does not include the possibility that life can exist without matter. I cannot believe you are this clueless. Go peddle your shit elsewhere. 1
Genady Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 10 minutes ago, Luc Turpin said: a natural principle [does] not involve matter For example ...?
Gees Posted 45 minutes ago Posted 45 minutes ago On 1/29/2025 at 10:57 AM, swansont said: Put another way - we’ve seen this behavior long before ChatGPT came along. Blaming stuff on bots is kinda lazy. The only other options here are: life always existed, or life was the result of magic/mysticism. Otherwise, life had to originate at some point, and that’s abiogenesis. Since science’s domain does not cover magic/mysticism, and that avenue was expressly rejected by the author, and also that we can pretty safely rule out life existing on the proto-earth, it’s what we’re left with. IOW, abiogenesis must be accepted. What’s not yet been shown are the mechanisms and steps of that process. Swansont, Do you have any idea of how many times the words "supernatural", "magic", and "mysticism" have been used in this thread? The interesting part is that the words are always used by "science" people. So I guess the only options here are to conclude that religious people think "God" started life and the science people think that magic started life? It is no wonder that Luc and I are having trouble in this thread, as we don't think either of those things happened. I didn't think this thread was about abiogenesis, but then maybe it is. Gee -2
iNow Posted 20 minutes ago Posted 20 minutes ago 25 minutes ago, Gees said: the only options here are to conclude that religious people think "God" started life and the science people think that magic started life? Another option is that you seem to struggle with reading comprehension
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