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On 16/12/2024 1:53 am, Martin Harran wrote:
>
<snip>
>>>No, wrong. Demonstrating an existing theory to be false has no>
requirement to provide and demonstrate a viable alternative*.
In regard to demonstrating a theory to be false, you haven't done
that, all you have done is identify areas that have not been
explained, at least not yet. There is nothing at all unusual about
that in science. Darwin's ToE was initially unable to explain how
traits and characteristics got passed on between generations; it took
Mendel to do that. In making his claims about heliocentrism, Galileo
was unable to explain tides and stellar parallax, it took a couple of
centuries to sort all that out. In neither case were the claims false.
>
You seem incapable or unwilling to grasp that *unexplained* does not
equate to *wrong*.
>
In regard to a viable alternative, you have put an alternative forward
- supernatural causes - but you have provided nothing whatsoever to
support its viability. Again, you seem incapable or unwilling to grasp
that even if A is wrong,that does not automatically mean that B is
right, that B needs to stand on its own grounds. That is the
fundamental flaw in ID which is what you constantly mimic.
Not playing tit-for-tat, but I return a similar criticism: you seem
incapable or unwilling to grasp or maintain a coherent focus on the
content, logic and qualifications of my argument.
Content: OOL is too complicated and too many unexplained gaps to be
due to natural processes.
I've been putting forward problems that have been described as a paradox
(e.g. tar), or that I'm suggesting may have P = 0 (e.g. warm little pond
continuous operation over millions of years). That is, I'm looking at
potential showstoppers, no just "too complicated" or "too many
unexplained gaps". At the same time noting that there is a degree of
subjectivity and overlap in these categorisations. And of course, in
each case supporting evidence is needed.
>>
Logic: because of that complexity and those gaps, ideas and
explanations based on natural processes must be wrong - therefore OOL
must have been due to supernatural causes.
Have I missed anything in those two parts?
I'm not sure what qualifications you mean, I may have missed them.
A key qualification is my option 1 and 2 proposal, which is much more
nuanced than your summary.
>
That said, I do appreciate your engagement with these ideas and your
willingness to concede the point below. And I may need to more carefully
consider some of the objections raised by yourself and others (what
would you suggest they might be?).
>[...]
To recap some points:
>
- If the tar paradox is connected with configurational entropy, then
that is potentially a hard stop
>
- If the first protocell must have a warm little pond or connected ponds
supplying concentrated activated canonical nucleotides continuously for
millions of years, this may arguably be a geological impossibility
>
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