shernren
you are not reading this.
- Feb 17, 2005
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There are no theories of abiogenesis.
I glanced at the Wikipedia entry linked to above, I found this to be cute:
"Clay theory of the origin of life
A hypothesis for the origin of life based on clay..."
Evolutionists like to use "hypothesis" and "theory" interchangeably, and then accuse Creationists of ignorance for the correct use of these terms. They also use "fact" and "theory" interchangeably (the "Theory" of Evolution is a "fact"). I guess logically, you shouldn't be surprised then when they insist a mere hypothesis, a wild guess, is a scientifically established fact.
There are a number of abiogenesis hypotheses, but none of them are more substantive than claiming that intelligent aliens from outer space planted life on Earth. Some Evolutionists really consider this to be a possibility; although, the aliens can't be God because then it wouldn't be scientific.
This is the same thing people were saying at the start of the century about plate tectonics and quantum mechanics.
Oh well. To each his own.
To a large extent, yes.
Chemistry is certainly nothing but messy physics
Or maybe physics is particularly well defined chemistry?
They started from different places but ended up in pretty much the same place.
Chemistry is like thermodynamics, we simply don't have the computing power to work out how a room full of gas molecules behave by looking at them /only/ as individual molecules, we have to look at them as an assemblage.
And biology is "just" taking chemistry one step further down the messiness slope.
Is the whole greater than the sum of its parts?
Well, despite what I have written above I find it worthwhile to remember that very few of the atoms in your body today were there 10 years ago...
Hey, the only real science is physics. Everything else is just stamp collecting ...
... but there are a whole lot of stamps out there.
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