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Vene, I think this is an open access article. I could download the full text no problem without being on the university network or using my off-campus login.I just wish I had access to the article instead of the abstract.

Then maybe I'm just incompetent.Vene, I think this is an open access article. I could download the full text no problem without being on the university network or using my off-campus login.
Thanks for the ref, by the way.
(See, True Blue? Open access. Even you can read it.)
True_Blue, why do you insist on saying things like the above quotes? Really? What do you know about what "science really is"?
What if I told you what "Law" really was? What if I did it after I showed time and again I haven't the slightest idea how any judicial system really works, I just told you what I felt it should work like?
You have proven time and again you think science is a tool to assist you in making more money. That is fine. It is something that many busines people think. I work in an industry that, like most industries, sees R&D as a "necessary evil" that eats into their precious bottom line. So I'm used to business people's scientifically illiterate attitudes.
But what I find amazing is that you make a variety of sweeping claims about chemistry on this thread, and when you are shown you may be in error in your overgeneralization, you simply ignore or move on. What about Temperate's Challenge?
I can't help but notice your "expertise" seems to fall apart when you merely have to use your version of a chemical model to calculate the odds of a reaction and its yield. It is doubly interesting because I suspect you know that Temperate Sea Islander could then show you how right or wrong you were, and as most Creationists, I sense you are afraid of that.
I can understand that. You don't know how science is really done but you do know what it's like to present a point and then be shown your error in your field. But so many Creationists never put those two things together and they never think they will called on the carpet for a claim in a field outside of their own.
Creationists have a "missing cylinder" of sorts. They know what it's like to be error as all people have experienced that, but they seem incapable of realizing that they could be in error in the sciences despite their not having any real science background! It is as if they think they have God's Shield to protect them.
Well, let's see the power of God's Shield. Use your model to show us how effectively it is capable of handling a comparatively simple system:
Use your model to show us what the results are, then we'll have Temperate pull up the actual ratios and we can determine if your model has even simple merit.
Fair enough?
That huge flow of money is not available to Creationists by virtue of the 1st Amendment Establishment Clause.
If science were funded by the private sector and not by the government, the balance of power between creation and evolution in the US would dramatically shift.
If you were on the other side of the debate, you would be as frustrated as I.
But you are on the other side of the debate. You are a biotech entrepreneur, remember? How is your creationist biotech company doing? Or does your company rely on evilution?
To answer your other question, we intend to use principles of microevolution to the maximum extent possible, and we rejected a business process effectively based on macroevolution. Of course, the business partners didn't look at the technical and business decision through the lens of origins or evolution, but that's effectively how we structured the business.
Can give more details on the accepted principle and the rejected one? I ask because, after 25 years working in the field, the only time I see the words micro and macro in front of evolution is when a creationist is speaking/writing.
I'm afraid I can't provide such details. Suffice it to say that microbes can be bred
My statement about science was premised on the idea that the government is subsidizing a heck of a lot of evolutionist research, which has a very weak, attenuated relation to commercial value.
That huge flow of money is not available to Creationists by virtue of the 1st Amendment Establishment Clause.
If science were funded by the private sector and not by the government, the balance of power between creation and evolution in the US would dramatically shift.
If you were on the other side of the debate, you would be as frustrated as I.
Please give me a one or two days to analyze your problem. I may come back to you to ask questions.
As Thaum said, pharmaceutical companies use evolution-based techniques. Biomedical companies use evolution-based research. And here's an example. If common descent wasn't true there would be absolutely no reason to pursue this line of research. Not to mention how pointless it would be to test new medicine on animals before moving on to human volunteers.My statement about science was premised on the idea that the government is subsidizing a heck of a lot of evolutionist research, which has a very weak, attenuated relation to commercial value.
If common descent wasn't true there would be absolutely no reason to pursue this line of research. Not to mention how pointless it would be to test new medicine on animals before moving on to human volunteers.
By the way, I find it funny you bring up microevolution, considering that when evolution was first proposed creationists even denied microevolution.
Your group is (slowly) accepting evolutionary premises.
I wonder if in a few decades creationists are going to claim that life except for humans evolved, but that we were specially created.
True_Blue, why do you insist on saying things like the above quotes? Really? What do you know about what "science really is"?
What if I told you what "Law" really was? What if I did it after I showed time and again I haven't the slightest idea how any judicial system really works, I just told you what I felt it should work like?
You have proven time and again you think science is a tool to assist you in making more money. That is fine. It is something that many busines people think. I work in an industry that, like most industries, sees R&D as a "necessary evil" that eats into their precious bottom line. So I'm used to business people's scientifically illiterate attitudes.
But what I find amazing is that you make a variety of sweeping claims about chemistry on this thread, and when you are shown you may be in error in your overgeneralization, you simply ignore or move on. What about Temperate's Challenge?
I can't help but notice your "expertise" seems to fall apart when you merely have to use your version of a chemical model to calculate the odds of a reaction and its yield. It is doubly interesting because I suspect you know that Temperate Sea Islander could then show you how right or wrong you were, and as most Creationists, I sense you are afraid of that.
I can understand that. You don't know how science is really done but you do know what it's like to present a point and then be shown your error in your field. But so many Creationists never put those two things together and they never think they will called on the carpet for a claim in a field outside of their own.
Creationists have a "missing cylinder" of sorts. They know what it's like to be error as all people have experienced that, but they seem incapable of realizing that they could be in error in the sciences despite their not having any real science background! It is as if they think they have God's Shield to protect them.
Well, let's see the power of God's Shield. Use your model to show us how effectively it is capable of handling a comparatively simple system:
Use your model to show us what the results are, then we'll have Temperate pull up the actual ratios and we can determine if your model has even simple merit.
Fair enough?
Thaumatury, now that I've had some time to look at your question
, there's something odd about it. I have several questions for you: Is this reaction a necessary condition for abiogenesis?
If so, which of the resulting molecules, when created, is necessary for the synthesis of a living organism?
Are you assuming an aqueous solution?
When nitric acid and sulfuric acid are reacted (something odd about such an attempt--it doesn't seem like a particularly efficient kind of a reaction)
, what is the proportion of the products?
If the one necessary for life is formed in 60% proportion, then in that particular stage, the probability of that particular step is 60% under simplistic assumptions.
But for some reason, I think you and TemperateSeaIsland are somehow misapprehending something.
TemperateSeaIsland seems to be conflating a method of analysis with an algorithm to predict the products of reactions. That's just bizarre to me.
Abiogenesis and evolution are two separate things.
Most scientists think the first microorganisms on earth came from meteors containing microbes suspended in cryogenic animation.
Its very possible for microbes to survive in ice and then become reanimated.