I never said that curiosity and a search for truth is wrong.
Then what ARE you saying? Because it really does sound as if you are saying that abiogenesis researches are "waisting their time" or something similar. And all you seem to offer to support that, is that we are currently ignorant on how it worked or could work. Which is ironic, because that's precisely the reason why more research would be required.......
Or is there perhaps an underlying problem here? Maybe you are worried about these scientists actually succeeding in solving the problem?
That's an interesting question to ask, actually... how
would you react, if let's say tomorrow a team solves the riddle of abiogenesis and is actually capable of demonstrating beyond reasonable doubt how life could
naturally arise where there was no life before?
It's a serious question, by the way.
Imaginative embellishments based on presuppositions and wishful thinking accompanied by irrational refusals to consider far more viable alternatives isn't scientific inquiry.
Instead of the vague rethoric and buzzwords, how about you say something concrete?
For example: what "viable" alternatives? How are they "viable"?
What "presuppositions"? What "wishful thinkinge"?
To say that life arises spontaneously without absolutely no observable evidence that it ever has or does is sheer conjecture and not a description of something that nature provides a clear example of.
First, if it was already observed and understood then there would be no need to ask the question.
Secondly, as opposed to what exactly? Unobservable, unsupportable "designers" engaging in unobservable "acts of creation"?
At least the models that abiogenesis researchers come up with, are testable - even if they turn out wrong for the time being.
Here's the thing though... Life exists. It originated somehow. There's no "logic" problem with asking the question and actually attempting to answer it.
That's exactly what abiogenesis researchers are doing: they are willing to ask the question and try and come up with sensible answers.
As opposed to ID'ists or creationists... instead of first asking the question and then getting to work to try and aswer it... they pretend to have the answers
before asking the question. They already "know" the answer, because it's written in their holy book.
The clear example nature provides is that life is derived only from previous life. That's the NATURAL process and not abiogenesis. That's how it's backwards.
Still not getting it.
What I said was that nothing about the idea of biogenesis excludes a natural origin of life.
BTW
Scientific inquiry isn't the sole propriety of atheists.
Never said otherwise either. It's actually you folks who consistently try to draw some relation between science and atheism.