- Aug 14, 2019
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Even if precursors for life occur, in the right place at the right time (70 years of OOL research says it's not happening), there is no mechanism by which those chemicals can come to life. A lightning strike? I know about lightning through work before I retired. It is entirely destructive, not constructive. What else could it be? Frank Crick had no explanation, Nobel prize notwithstanding. Fred Hoyle must have watched too many sci fi movies. "In the beginning, God......." is still the most plausible and logical explanation that I've ever heard.You mean like how metals like iron when exposed to the elements 'suddenly, for no reason', corrode forming oxides; how volcanic sulphur 'suddenly, for no reason' forms sulphuric acid; how minerals dissolved in water 'suddenly, for no reason', precipitate out, forming crystals and other deposits?
IOW, you mean chemistry? Is it so surprising that chemistry occurs when there are chemicals around?
Life is basically just a very complex redox reaction. One light-hearted way of putting it is that the purpose of life is to hydrogenate carbon dioxide.
BTW, chemical reactions don't always happen suddenly, they can be very slow, but they always have a reason (a cause, an explanation).
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