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   talk.origins      Evolution versus creationism (sometimes      142,579 messages   

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   Message 141,486 of 142,579   
   MarkE to Chris Thompson   
   Re: Mapping the Origins Debate   
   10 Sep 25 22:04:04   
   
   From: me22over7@gmail.com   
      
   On 10/09/2025 12:53 pm, Chris Thompson wrote:   
   > MarkE wrote:   
   >> On 7/09/2025 12:28 pm, Chris Thompson wrote:   
   >>   
   >>>> This brings me back to my "1000 years" thought exercise. If that   
   >>>> scenario did play out, it would be an instance of science providing   
   >>>> evidence of non-causality. That's the other sharp edge - evidence   
   >>>> from science giving reason to consider explanations beyond the reach   
   >>>> of science.   
   >>>   
   >>> Perhaps you could rephrase that? It sounds like gobbledygook.   
   >>>   
   >>> But we really don't need to wait a thousand years. We can start with   
   >>> one simple question: what has religion produced in the last 2000   
   >>> years, as far as tangible results about the OOL? We've got a few   
   >>> books that describe magic poofing. We've got a bunch of fables, like   
   >>> those featuring Coyote. We've got the Dreamtime of Australian   
   >>> Aboriginal people. And at least a few hundred others. None of these   
   >>> seem to be any more reliable than the rest. Why hasn't religion   
   >>> settled on one, or at least a few similar hypotheses? Just because   
   >>> science has been doing other stuff should not have held theologians   
   >>> back from working on this.   
   >>   
   >> I agree that we don't need to wait 1000 years, that's an overly   
   >> conservative number for the exercise. OOL research is already   
   >> progressively revealing inadequacies in naturalistic explanations of   
   >> even a protocell*.   
   >>   
   >> But I digress. This discussion is a reasonably careful attempt to   
   >> define and delineate epidemiological categories and their application.   
   >> Thoughtful opposing contributions welcome. However, statements like   
   >> "sounds like gobbledygook", "magic poofing", and "a bunch of fables"   
   >> are standard TO fare and a lazy category error.   
   >>   
   >> I believe you can do better.   
   >   
   > I think you're being oversensitive here. I said it sounds like   
   > gobbledegook- meaning I don't get it. That's why I asked for further   
   > explanation.   
   >   
   > Athena got pissed off and turned Arachne into a spider. How is that not   
   > "magic poofing"?   
   >   
   > A fable is a category of story that features anthropomorphic animals or   
   > plants, and has some kind of moral that's made clear at the end. Are you   
   > really saying creation stories don't have fables associated with them?   
   >   
   > Chris   
   >   
      
   To use an Australian idiom, yeah nah. I'm not being oversensitive - it's   
   business as usual for TO. Rather, your tone gives you away. But I do   
   think you can do better.   
      
   >   
   >>   
   >> -------   
   >>   
   >> * For example:   
   >>   
   >> 1. The thread here "New" "ideas" on origin of life: "The study finds   
   >> life’s origin faces severe mathematical challenges".   
   >>   
   >> 2. Deeper OOL paradoxes only partially acknowledged, e.g. https://   
   >> link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11084-014-9379-0   
   >>   
   >> 3. Or this (https://groups.google.com/g/talk.origins/c/HMw_ZoXIIOc/m/   
   >> nb1u4MD6AAAJ):   
   >>   
   >> This talk is from 2015, though David Deamer's book "Assembling Life"   
   >> that is based on this was published in 2019. Note Bruce Damer's call   
   >> for a new approach to OoL, and note the uncanny alignment with Tour,   
   >> Bains, Long Story Short, etc:   
   >>   
   >> 4:29 “[OoL research has] been mainly focused on individual solution   
   >> chemistry experiments where they want to show polymerization over   
   >> here, or they want to show metabolism over here, and Dave and I   
   >> believe that it's time for the field to go from incremental progress   
   >> to substantial progress. So, these are the four points we've come up   
   >> with to make substantial progress in the origin of life, and the first   
   >> one is to employ something called system chemistry, having sufficient   
   >> complexity so instead of one experiment say about proteins, now you   
   >> have an experiment about the encapsulation of proteins for example,   
   >> and informational molecules built from nucleotides in an environment   
   >> that would say be like an analog of the early Earth, build a complex   
   >> experiment. Something we're calling sufficient complexity, and all of   
   >> these experiments have to move the reactions away from equilibrium.   
   >> And what do we mean by that? Well, in in your high school chemistry   
   >> experiments, something starts foaming something changes color and then   
   >> the experiment winds down and stops. Well, life didn't get started   
   >> that way. Life got started by a continuous run-up of complexity and   
   >> building upon in a sense nature as a ratchet. So we have to figure out   
   >> how to build experiments that move will move away from equilibrium…”   
   >>   
   >> 6:31 “You can't sit in a laboratory just using glassware. You have to   
   >> go to the field. You have to go to hot springs, you have to go to […]   
   >> Iceland and come check and sit down and see what the natural   
   >> environment is like, rather than being in the ethereal world of pure   
   >> reactants and things like that…”   
   >>   
   >>   
   >   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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