Yes, it serves as a great primer for people who may not grasp the basics, rather than throwing peer reviewed scientific papers at them straight off the bat.
I do, yes. I'm not sure you know the difference between a Law and a Theory as they relate to science though... a Law is one very specific small fact or formula that generally has to be 100% right without exception (though not always the case...). a Theory encompasses Laws, Evidence and Facts, and is consistently verified repeatedly against further evidence & facts and also provide useful & testable predictions that are also self-verifying. A Theory can be adjusted to new facts or evidence to make it more accurate and/or useful in it's predictive capability (see Newton's Law of Gravity and Einstein's General Theory of Relativity for example)
Pasteur did
not demonstrate, nor could he have, that it’s
impossible for life to emerge from non-life in any circumstances. He simply established that it does not happen in everyday life, and that the life all around us is far more connected than people once thought. If genetics had been further along at the time he could have known this for certain, because all known life is genetically related and therefore descended from a single organism, a common ancestor. -
http://asktheatheist.com/?tag=law-of-biogenesis
We have already found organic compounds in space - given how big the universe is, it'd be premature to say that abiogenesis can't happen - or hasn't happened elsewhere already... Life didn't "suddenly become this complex creature capable of reproduction", it took billions of years to get to that point.