This is part of your problem with this topic. You set up some large leap straight to a (simple) functioning cell, when as far as I can tell, that has never been the position of scientific OOL work. (This time you've left out the canards about thousands of proteins expecting something akin the simplest cells that exist today, though you *have* included it in posts this month [perhaps this thread, I'm not going to check right now].)
From what I can tell, the path in OOL research has always been something like:
1. simple building blocks (amino acids, nucleotides, simple sugars, fatty acids) from simple molecules possibly with some sort of catalysis such as on a mineral surface, or as tested in Miller-Urey, electrical discharge.
2. Formation of larger biomolecules from the basic building blocks. Again likely with catalysis until some turn out to be self-catalyzing.
3. Formation of vesicles to contain these self-replicating chemicals. At this point feedback loops and limiting cycles develop of the same sort that drive nearly everything inside cells today. These would include simple chemical metabolic cycles.
4. Development of some sort of genetic code. Bits of RNA attach to amino acids and start "transcribing" proteins. At this point changes to certain bits of RNA result in changes to the proteins and evolution can really take off. Abiogenesis is complete.
Noting your phrase "OOL research" has status of OOL guesswork and conjecture and you would be about right. The above is precisely what people believe, mainly to avoid the problem of jumps. But that is all it is: a belief.
But There is still the speciic transition to evolving. Beforethat there is no mechanism for change, so there can only be more of the same. (Just supposing as you do , there is already replication of the more of the same, which is not a given in a complicated structure) .
But here is the philosophical problem in a nutshell: the transition to evolving IS a change in a cell which has no mechanism for change since it is not evolving till it makes the change. . That is a unique step. It is also a big step up in complexity.
Since all of the previous is assumed in conjecture to happen without guidance and by random chance with many other outcomes too, there is also the problem there is not a shred of evidence that there are or have been lesser forms or indeed that the process is still continuing. So there is no actual evidence any of this actually happened only very incomplete arguments for how some of it might have happened.
The day someone gives it a structure and does an experiment that shows how non living became living, I am all ears. Until then it is a serious conceptual problem. I am not actually against it. I am against it being presented as though it were fact, as Dawkins does.
Dawkins seems completely oblivious to his own contradiction and gibberish when he said "we have no evidence about how life started but we know what kind of step it must have been"
Ever since I saw an article in new scientist 50 (yes fifty!!!) years ago about protocel design , I have followed the area with interest. So it is unlikely you will find anything I have not seen before. As you all know I am a read-a-holic and i even get mocked for it!
Dont get me wrong it is a valid and useful area of research, just so long as the conclusions do not race ahead of the evidence.
To follow sagans folly and antithesis of science. "extraordinary claims need extraordinary evidence". You can rule abiogenesis out. It clearly is extraordinary!
I can only contrast that status of guessing, with actual forensic evidence that shows recently live cardiac tissue in eucharistic miracles mingled at the edges with bread , that cannot be faked by any mechanism so far proposed, that has far more scientific evidence as an origin of life. I dont need that evidence to be true, but it is next to impossible to falsify. Yet none of you so much as study that evidence.
There is little point in repeating any of this again. The "conjecture" in abiogenesis runs way ahead of the evidence.