Subduction Zone
Regular Member
What I really meant is that I posted it for those who believe in an ID but if anyone wishes to respond I appreciate it although I don't wish to debate. My apology if I gave that other negative impression. About the key points, there actually aren't any since the questions that he answers are so many. But my general impression of his key points were that the conditions on Earth were not conducive to abiogenesis because of ultraviolet radiation, and other harsh environmental factors such as entropy the presence of oxygen and the mathematical improbability of all necessary factors essential to life appearing at the same time. He also mentions that there are many unsubstantiated presuppositions needed for the abiogenesis idea as well as the required rejection of all others. One presupposition is that it occurred. That is the presupposition that engenders all other explanations and refuses to admit any alternate views. However, he as a scientist finds that assumption unwarranted.
I found his comments informative concerning:
1. Oxygen interference with abiogenesis
2. Unwarranted assumptions that there no oxygen was present.
And what did I tell you about misusing the word "assumption". The lack of O2 in the early atmosphere was not an assumption. Sometimes scientists will use the term when they rely on the work of another. If another scientist has done some work that touches on theirs they may "assume" that the work of the other scientist was correct. That there was little to no molecular O2 in the early atmosphere has been confirmed many times.
3. Miller Experiment result evaluation as non-biological
It was never meant to be. If you want to use that argument then you did not understand the point of it.
4. His evaluation of proteinoids as totally devoid of any potential life processes.
5. No mathematical chance of generating specific order or complexity for the formation of cell.
6. Major problem: No chemical pathway to acquire information needed for cell function as being discovered.
These three all sound like arguments from ignorance. Odds arguments have always been so when I have seen them.
7. No experimental indication of how matter could increase in functional complexity.
Is he talking about in existing life? We know how that happens. If he is talking about abiogenesis it is simply another argument from ignorance.
8. Problem RNA world concept. RNA would be destroyed ultra-violate radiation.
Only near the surface. How deep do you think that UV penetrates water?
9. His admission that an ID is the most logical conclusion
How is that an admission? It sounds like a bad conclusion to me.
10 Specified complexity explanation
Huge fail. Specified complexity is a nonsense claim.
11. Evolution’s Immunity to critical examination in schools .
The only reason that it seems immune is that it is essentially correct. It has been tweaked and tuned quite a bit since Darwin's time. You might as well complain about gravity's immunity to critical examination.
Yes, people that do not believe in gravity fail all of the time when they try to do a critical examination of it. So do people that don't accept the theory of evolution.
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