On abiogenesis you cannot say When. Where. What. Whether. You cannot give a structure for the first cell. The pathway too it. The pathway from it. You cannot reproduce it, and it does not reproduce.
You are ignoring the breakthroughs and progress that is being made in the RNA World Hypothesis.
What you are basically saying is that if science science does not have
all the answers it
must be something else. And we know what your else is.
In short you have pure speculation. Not even a valid hypothesis. A line of inquiry.
It is because I am a scientist, I can give it true status.
You keep providing excellent examples of projection. Keep them coming.
Where by way of comparison there is ACTUAL forensic pathology evidencce for eucharistic miracles, that have reoccurred, the means to duplicate them (ie create them by fraud) is presently unknown to science.
There are also excellent examples of shaman and yoga and Buddhist miraculous events. There are many, many cases of spontaneous remissions of cancer as well as other seemly incurable diseases. The human body is
biology garden. Read the full literature of miraculous cures.
A pathologist stated is "compelling evidence for creation of tissue".
That is why I am inclined to believe them. A SCIENTIFIC belief.
Score on actual evidence for demonstrated origin of life.
Creation 4. Abiogenesis 0
However weak that evidence is , it is better than yours.
Opinions, opinions and more opinions.
I actually have studied with people who have worked with shamans and studied such cures such as Mrs. Marie Coleman Nelson who integrated concepts relating in sorcerers’ ritual of initiation into her psychoanalytic theory and practice. Mrs. Nelson was also a former managing editor the Psychoanalytical Review.
I have also studied the work of Milton Ericson in depth.
From:
Commonalities Between Ericksonian Psychotherapy and Native American Healing
There are many commonalities between the techniques used in Ericksonian
psychotherapy and the healing rituals used in traditional Native American tribes. Milton
H. Erickson had some Indian heritage and may have derived some of his therapeutic
techniques from his study of tribal healing practices. A review of the literature shows that
both approaches emphasize symbolic healing through the use of story telling, metaphors,
ambiguous tasks, ordeals, and rituals.
It's highly likely that many miraculous cures can be attributed to the body being a
biology garden.
You are welcome to your belief from faith, but so far you have little to go on with abiogenesis. Other than excessive hype. So I find your faith in it puzzling.
I might believe it if there is ever sufficient evidence.
What I am not doing is misrepresenting science with excessive hype. I can't stop you from labeling mine and other's trust in the scientific method as faith. Perhaps it serves as a purpose in giving your own religious faith a boost.