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Agreed -- nevertheless...Cute and incorrect.
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Agreed -- nevertheless...Cute and incorrect.
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One of the atheist thinks that nature can't be designed as it different from man-made items.You may find this video interesting:
Ray Comfort interview - The Atheist Experience #702 (full episode) - YouTube!
One of the atheist thinks that nature can't be designed as it different from man-made items.
You may find this video interesting.
ECG: The Origin of Life
This is basic chemistry that atheist has to refuse to believe. They have to believe in some unknown god... I meant science that will be discovered in the future. Atheist do reject science that goes against their world view.
Rick, again thank you for your prompt response. I emboldened a part of your post above and I have a question dealing with it. In one of your earlier posts you had said (or perhaps it was someone else) that not every layer has fossils in it. Is that a correct statement? If I work with the assumption that that was a true statement, I have a quandary based upon that. Here goes:
Say a geologist is working in the bottom of a canyon (not the GMC type) in the middle of Colorado (not the Chevy type either), and there are no fossils in the rock that he is investigating, and he finds a strain of volcanic rock covering the canyon floor and part of the layer that he is examining. How can he know that the (let's say) limestone he is looking at is Mauv Limestone from the Cambrian or if its Kaibab Limestone from the Permian? There wouldn't be any tags that say "Hey, I'm X years old!"
I give the above hypothetical example because, to be really honest with you, it sure does look as though in short the fossils date the rocks and the rocks date the fossils (at least to an extent). Could you enlighten me more on this?
John was careful not to make any claims about evolution just the origins of life. As John noted the origins of life deals with chemistry.Chemists, physicists, mathematicians... it seems like its pretty easy to find someone in just about any field to come out on record as saying evolution is impossible... except biologists.
So pretty much anybody who isn't qualified to talk about it.
Not sure if John Walton is wicked or ignorant, but he is one of the two, as he completely avoids addressing that state of science as regards abiogenesis.
John was careful not to make any claims about evolution just the origins of life. As John noted the origins of life deals with chemistry.
John was careful not to make any claims about evolution just the origins of life. As John noted the origins of life deals with chemistry.
People don't like the idea of a creator or ID either. That doesn't change anything.Yes, but let's be serious here. What's going on is that a lot of people really don't like evolution, but unfortunately for them we've reached the point where it's become scientifically unassailable.
There is no science evidence of abiogenesis. All the known science (chemistry) goes against abiogenesis. Even some OOL researchers admit today's science doesn't support it but hope some unknown future science will.But abiogenesis is much murkier, and so you can still seem somewhat scientific while attacking that. So you can call the science of abiogenesis into question, and if you can convince people they're rejecting abiogeneis on a rational basis then they get to feel good about rejecting evolution.
Biologist studies living cells which are not around for abiogenesis. abiogenesis comes down to chemistry.What we've got here is a chemist (and not a biologist) coming out against evolution. I don't care what kind of hat he wears while he does it.
If he promoted Zeus doesn't invalid the problems he address. Atheist are left with no choice but ignore the science (chemistry) this guy presents.Leaving aside for a moment the fact that defeating abiogenesis would leave you in a rather bizarre situation because you haven't actually said a thing against evolution, my favorite part of the video was the very end. His final point is that it's time to give intelligent design a fair try.
It implies all that persecution nonsense. The mainstream scientific community is suppressing all the "real" science due to their biases. Like if he were gonna do some experiments into intelligent design the mainstream scientists would sneak in at night and bust up his lab or something.
And it's important to sell that idea. Otherwise no matter how much trash he talks about abiogenesis, the fact that intelligent design has nothing at all to say for itself comes to light.
Sure some people don't, but do I need to find that comical pie chart for you?People don't like the idea of a creator or ID either. That doesn't change anything.
There is no science evidence of abiogenesis.
I don't think abiogenesis researchers would insist on this. While it's generally believed that all extant life forms share a common ancestor, that doesn't necessarily mean there weren't other origins of life that did not leave living descendants.So the common understanding of abiogenesis is that it happened the once, and that single line of replicators produced all life.
Good question. I think there might be ways to know, but I'm not at all certain.Obviously if it happened again today modern organisms would just devour the proto-organisms without anyone ever knowing, but if it happened more than once at the dawn of life on Earth, and more than one line survived to the present day, would things look any different than they do? Would there be any way to know?
The genetic code is clearly the outcome of selection. It's uncannily good at minimising errors, for one thing. (Though obviously slanted towards the ID-is-bunk angle, cdk007's genetic code video discusses that and has its sources in the description.)DNA-to-Protein translation is pretty much universal, but is that because it appeared the one time with an arbitrary pattern, locked in, and never changed, or because there's a best way to do it, and after 4 billion years or so, everything's settled up to that same spot?
If you can find where you read about that, I would be intrigued!I remember reading about some experiments involving a team trying to produce cells that only used 8 amino acids, and they could only get it down to 12, because the mutants they were generating were quickly re-evolving lost acids back in. Amino acids from the basic 20 everything uses. Not new, weird alien amino acids.
Evidence shows even from evolutionist that living cells appear very early so you don't have billions of years. That's the reason he used the minimum DNA required (530,000) for cell reproduction known for today.Sure some people don't, but do I need to find that comical pie chart for you?
Well that's not true, but I'll grant John Walton does a good job of making it look that way.
He presents a lot of data and carefully arranges it in such a way as to get you to draw the wrong lines between dots... but most of the data is itself valid, so unlike most creationist shills you don't have to be totally scientifically illiterate to give him credence, but if we're going to actually look at it...
He engages in the common tactic of presenting modern cells, the products of 4+ billion years of evolution, and mischaracterizing abiogenesis as the idea one of these things just popped out of nowhere.
I do remember he mention about some simple chemical reproduction but far short of coming anywhere close to producing life.(metabolism-first scenarios) He did focus more on the genetic-first theory.And there's other fun little bits. His claim that chemical reproductive behavior outside a cell has never been observed is simply false, it's been false for decades, and I find it difficult to imagine someone with his qualifications could have been ignorant of that.
He's main point from my understanding was not the oxygen were as high as they are today but the fact oxygen should have been present in the past. He give example of places in our solar system where we do detect oxygen. There is also another catch-22 problem with salt that he didn't mention. (sea vs fresh water)He talks about finding some needle-in-a-haystack RNA molecule that is autocatalytic. Like it's some impossible holy grail, but virtually any RNA (or DNA) sequence will exert some pressure favoring itself over other random configurations. In fact, DNA sequencing technology is dependent on the fact that DNA sequences select for themselves outside of cells.
Watch his bit about oxygen very carefully. I don't know enough about geology to know exactly where he's getting things wrong, but he doesn't demonstrate a high-oxygen primordial earth. He just sets out some data that seems like it must indicate that and lets the audience draw their conclusions.
Evidence shows even from evolutionist that living cells appear very early so you don't have billions of years. That's the reason he used the minimum DNA required (530,000) for cell reproduction known for today.
He's main point from my understanding was not the oxygen were as high as they are today but the fact oxygen should have been present in the past. He give example of places in our solar system where we do detect oxygen.
As John noted there are recent studies that bring into question the Great Oxidation Event that OOL researchers assumed. Even low amount of oxygen would be a serious problem for OOL.It took quite a while for oxygen to make its way into the oceans and atmosphere to the point where life could explode and diversify in the oceans and subsequently move on land. Here's a few papers giving some insight into this:
http://www.csun.edu/~hmc60533/CSUN_311/article_references/Sc_Feb93_EarthEarlyAtmos.pdf
http://atmo.tamu.edu/class/geos489/lecture3/science298_2341.pdf
http://www3.geosc.psu.edu/~jfk4/PersonalPage/Pdf/J._Geophys_Res._00.pdf
http://www.geosc.psu.edu/~jfk4/PersonalPage/Pdf/Science_86.pdf
As John noted there are recent studies that bring into question the Great Oxidation Event that OOL researchers assumed. Even low amount of oxygen would be a serious problem for OOL.