The
natural state of the universe is the absence of life, therefore biological life on earth is
supernatural, therefore ..................
I had to trawl through pages of posts to find the source of your discussion with VirOptimus. Let's analyses your statements a little more closely.
The natural state of the universe is the absence of life.
Is this true in any sense? If we consider the volume of the solar system and the volume of the living elements of the biospshere and compare them, then, for all practical purposes, life is not present in the solar system. Of course, using a similar argument there are, for all practical purposes, no stars in the universe. Clearly judging the absence or presence of life by absolute volume is absurd.
So, is life absent from the universe apart from this singular occurance on Earth? Of course, we do not know. Therefore all we can say with certainty is that:
The natural state of the universe may be the absence of life, or ir may be the presence of life.
If we choose to speculate which is more likely between these two choices we note the following:
1. Life, as we know it, depends upon several elements, but four are of particular importance: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. And I'll throw phosphorus into the mix as well. How common are these? The answer is, very common. They are the 4th, 1st, 3rd and 7th most abundant. (P comes in at somewhere around 15.) Those are the estimates for the universe. The order varies slightly when we look at specific regions, but in all cases there are plenty of the elements we know are prerequisites for life.
2. Not only are the elements present, but they are often present in combinations that are part of the prebiotic chemistry that likely led to the origin of life. Considerably more than one hundred organic compounds have been detected "out there". They are in meteorites, planetary atmospheres, comets, coating the ice of satellites and (in huge quantities) in the Giant Molecular Clouds that - on collapse - generate multiple stellar systems.
3. And, we now know, those stellar systems frequently - perhaps almost always - have planets. And some of those planets are Earth like. Yet we have only begun to look.
4. Life appeared on Earth within 100 million years of conditions becoming 'mellow' enough. This means that either life can arise (naturally) rather quickly, or life arrived from somewhere else (
pan spermia).
These points suggest, quite strongly, that we should expect to find life elsewhere in the universe.
Yet you go on to say:
therefore biological life on earth is supernatural
Clearly such a statement is nonsense - you have not established that the natural state of the universe is the absence of life; the evidence suggests that all the major conditions required for life are available, out there, in quantity.
I suggest, if you intend to reply, you do so either to concede you were mistaken, or you come to the table with something properly researched, logically sound and succinctly presented.