Thaumaturgy, I have provided an analytical technique (probability) to test whether the abiogenesis model has validity.
Sorry, but that sentence doesn't make too much sense to me. You see, I've taken analytical chemistry classes and I've actually done analytical chemistry (it wasn't that much fun for me), but I can tell you "analytical techniques" are not just random number calculations. Statistics does play a role, but not without a firm understanding of the chemistry.
One can say that probability has no bearing whatsoever to organic chemistry,
I have never said that. Stochastic processes do play a role in chemistry, but not the way you have done them in your analysis.
and if so, the conversation is over--that person has put their faith in chemistry as the source of life and truth.
So,
you aren't going to apply your technique to an organic reaction?
Wow.
But if a person says that probability is a useful tool to judge the veracity of the abiogenesis model,
True, look, we all are abundantly aware of how little chemistry you have under your belt, but the whole point of the exercise was that Temperate provided you with a simple
known reaction that produced three configurations of an outcome. The idea was to convince you that a "simple" system which may
look like a "random" chance event in chemistry is
NOT RANDOM AT ALL.
This is something we who actually
have taken the time to learn chemistry have had to learn. It is a topic related to
eletrophilic substitution of aromatic rings. The chemistry that goes on in this system shows you that chemistry has subtlety and
demonstrably non-random factors that bias certain outcomes.
The fact that you are now running away from a simple challenge to "ground proof" your
own hypothesis indicates to me you are not going to rise above the level of usual Creationist spew. And that is sad. Especially when you make such grand claims about how chemistry is done.
It certainly calls into question your own belief in your hypothesis. I mean, you aren't even
trying to apply it here. You are trying to run away from it with post hoc justifications.
then that person might object to the assumptions I used in my original model, and say that the model should have a closer nexus to biochemistry.
You know, I'm getting tired of reading your
justification and two-stepping around the question. I can see you are a lawyer, you hope that by throwing more words at the problem it will go away.
Sorry, but we all know how much you
really believe in your own model now. If you can't use it to do
"simple" organic chemistry then how on earth do you think it will apply to really complex problems in organic chemistry like abiogenesis?
If so, then I do not have the skills to build the model and fashion the assumptions in a way that will be convincing to a graduate-trained biochem specialist.
Oh, so you are only interested in convincing the uneducated and scientifically illiterate? Again, standard creationist motiff.
The best I can do is suggest a framework with which to get started, which such person can accept or modify.
Well, I think the
chemists on this board have told you how to modify your framework:
abandon it in preference to actual chemistry. Don't abandon statistics and probability altogether, just don't think generating random probabilities without understanding the underlying chemistry is sufficient to your point.
I would assume life consists solely of a moderately long arrangement of the four base pairs of DNA (no cell membrane, metabolism, etc), take each of the four base pairs and identify which set of chemical reactions would spawn each of the base pairs, and calculate the odds of each reaction producing the required molecular arrangement. Make other simplifying assumptions as you see fit. Calculate the result.
That's all fine and dandy and I doubt very highly you are capable of even understanding the underlying chemistry involved.
But don't sweat it, we all know what "Creation science" is, it's just "words" meant to promulgate doubt and when the rubber meets the road, well most Creationists don't have the cojones to stand up to the challenge.
But they sure do like to throw more words of "justification" to make themselves
sound intelligent on the matter, all while never actually
doing anything of value.
Is that all you have? Poorly understood pseudoscience, misapplied probability theory and an unending stream of words to gloss over your failure in the details?
Sorry to hear that. But can't say as I'm surprised.