So atheists keep saying, that the two are not connected.
Except all the atheists on here and elsewhere seem to believe it, or have you not noticed you belong to that tribe!. I assume from your other remarks that you do believe it.
Which is hardly surprising since atheists have no other position to promote on life. it has to be part of the credo. Life was a random chance chemical accident.
But There is no evidence that the chemical mix percolating earth did produce life. There is No known process for it. Just a few pieces of conjecture, about how small parts of the process might have happened. And even if those bits might have happened there is no evidence they actually did.
All you have is belief.
You clearly have bad understanding of the staggering unlikelihood considering the irreducible complexity problem of a self evolving self replicating cell. The idea that you think it happened by pure random chance (amongst squillions of other outcomes of nearly life which didnt actually happen for which there is no evidence, or any evidence the process of trying is still ongoing).
Me ? I prefer scientific evidence. I have actual forensic evidence of human heart tissue from eucharistic host. Life from no life Several times. Whatever the weaknesses in it, my evidence trumps yours. I have some.
I am not actually challenging the idea that abiogenesis might have happened by random chance. I am open to persuasion, on science not wishful thinking.
I am challenging the idea that atheists are somehow more rational to believe it considering they do so with no evidence at all, and the staggering unlikelihood that it occurred, or could occur. Its a atheist belief no more and no less.
I am just evening up the score. We both have a belief.
But Mine has forensic evidence..
Abiogenesis is not an atheistic concept. It's a scientific concept. There is no atheistic position on abiogenesis or the the Big Bang or evolution. It's entirely possible to reject all three concepts and still be an atheist.
This misunderstanding alone would be enough to convince me that you have no idea what you're talking about.
Your central misunderstanding is to assume that life is special. It isn't. You assume it's special because it's familiar. The chemical mix percolating in an early Earth could have produced any number of outcomes. The fact that it produced life is neither amazing nor statistically improbable unless you assume it was destined to produce life. Your critical error is to assume, without reason, that life was a special and intentional outcome. You have confused the cart with the horse.
OB