Rejecting evolution with science...

Like I said we need to stop entertaining it. The guy keeps arguing that the scientific evidence is against the theory of evolution. He is being given an opportunity to support that claim now and instead he is trolling the lot of us and we are letting him get away with it.

Agreed. Don't know why I even bother. I just can't help it to try and help somebody in need.
 
I know that this has nothing to do with the Theory of Evolution, but has the emergence of life from non-living matter ever been observed?

We had a discussion about this the other day at work.
 
I know that this has nothing to do with the Theory of Evolution, but has the emergence of life from non-living matter ever been observed?

We had a discussion about this the other day at work.

No, only certain "building blocks" have been synthesized in labs. It would be quite a huge deal if scientists were able to create life from inorganic matter, but they have created artificial cells from existing cells using synthesized dna (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703559004575256470152341984.html).
 
I know that this has nothing to do with the Theory of Evolution, but has the emergence of life from non-living matter ever been observed?

We had a discussion about this the other day at work.

I commend you for the bold bit. As for the rest, I can't gauge whether you're being serious or facetious. If the former, perhaps you might've heard about it had it been observed? It'd be pretty big news, akin to finding poodles on Mars.

If you were to consider the question honestly, how surprising is it truly that our kids don't yet have create-your-own-pet sets? You're talking about something that happened a couple of thousand million years ago, in conditions we might never replicate accurately. What has however been observed is the emergence of organic compounds from inorganic matter.

But as you rightly say, whether the mystery of the emergence of life is ever solved is utterly irrelevant to evolutionary theory.
 
I know that this has nothing to do with the Theory of Evolution, but has the emergence of life from non-living matter ever been observed?

We had a discussion about this the other day at work.

Abiogenesis hasn't been replicated under scientific conditions, not because it can't be, but because we have no way of knowing the exact conditions on earth at that point in time, and marginal pH differences for example will have a significant impact. And considering the massive number of combinations, it is not plausible to expect that all conditions be tested and that all conditions have a positive result.

Best we can realistically do is run simulations through supercomputers and that is ongoing. There are physical experiments being conducted but they're really a shot in the dark for the time being...
 
I commend you for the bold bit. As for the rest, I can't gauge whether you're being serious or facetious. If the former, perhaps you might've heard about it had it been observed? It'd be pretty big news, akin to finding poodles on Mars.

If you were to consider the question honestly, how surprising is it truly that our kids don't yet have create-your-own-pet sets? You're talking about something that happened a couple of thousand million years ago, in conditions we might never replicate accurately. What has however been observed is the emergence of organic compounds from inorganic matter.

But as you rightly say, whether the mystery of the emergence of life is ever solved is utterly irrelevant to evolutionary theory.

Oh dear, so I should rather not discuss abiogenesis in the context of evolution then?
 
Why would you want to in the first place?
Perhaps not in the context of biological evolution or the Theory of Evolution. Abiogenesis is nonetheless a form of evolution/change as it is a process whereby changes in non-living substances over time resulted in the beginning of living substances. It can arguably be also cashed out in terms of differences in fitness over time similar to what is observed in biological evolution.
 
The two are completely unrelated, in the same way as you wouldn't discuss gravity and AIDS...
I wouldn't go so far seeing that there are similarities. Biological evolution and abiogenesis are both examples of evolution/change. And, as mentioned, abiogenesis can make use of terms normally associated with the Theory of evolution. The major difference is just that the Theory of evolution deals with biological evolution and abiogenesis deals with the evolution of non-living substances to living substances.
 
I wouldn't go so far seeing that there are similarities. Biological evolution and abiogenesis are both examples of evolution/change. And, as mentioned, abiogenesis can make use of terms normally associated with the Theory of evolution. The major difference is just that the Theory of evolution deals with biological evolution and abiogenesis deals with the evolution of non-living substances to living substances.

Thanks, its pretty interesting.
 
Well then abandallrope can provide us with some...

What on earth gave you the impression that I have any remote inclination to engage with you (and your cheerleaders) in a serious and earnest discussion on really important and profound issues like where we came from etc ?
 
It's weird, can only find one thread on abiogenesis and it's been closed. It was started by a loon though.
 
Hey :mad:! That was my testy, looney self back in the day :o.

Just how many identities have you had on here?! :eek:

It does seem that every iteration seems a bit less loony and testy than the last. Couple more nicks and you'll come join us on this side of the fence; the right side. ;)
 
What on earth gave you the impression that I have any remote inclination to engage with you (and your cheerleaders) in a serious and earnest discussion on really important and profound issues like where we came from etc ?

It might have something to do with you injecting yourself into these discussions and making claims akin to the thread title. So far you have proved yourself wholly incapable of engaging in serious, earnest, profound discussion in any way whatsoever. Seems all you're capable of is one-liners before what I can only assume is severe ADD that kicks in...

It's weird, can only find one thread on abiogenesis and it's been closed. It was started by a loon though.

Poor Techne...:D
 
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Just how many identities have you had on here?! :eek:

It does seem that every iteration seems a bit less loony and testy than the last. Couple more nicks and you'll come join us on this side of the fence; the right side. ;)
I think I am more on the right side as you appear to be more on the left side ;)? Maybe you have a different meaning for "right".... Language matters :p.

Btw, have you seen the "moving naturalism forward" sessions? Fascinating stuff!
 
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I think I am more on the right side as you appear to be more on the left side ;)? Maybe you have a different meaning for "right".... Language matters :p.

:D

Touché, old bean. I'm sure you were as convinced of your being [-]right[/-] correct in each of your prior... erm... phases. I do hope you're still around in oh, 10 or 20 years, so I can satiate my curiosity as to whether my prediction will ultimately be borne out.
 
:D

Touché, old bean. I'm sure you were as convinced of your being [-]right[/-] correct in each of your prior... erm... phases. I do hope you're still around in oh, 10 or 20 years, so I can satiate my curiosity as to whether my prediction will ultimately be borne out.
Ditto :).
 
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