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Arkalen wrote:<snip>
There are working assumptions. Abiogenesis is a working assumptionI'm not talking about abiogenesis in that (snipped) sentence, I'm talking about the conditions on early Earth, which is what you continue to seem to claim you were referring to when you talked about "faith". Can you clarify for me which if any of these claims you'd be willing to grant as plausible enough to draw inferences from in this conversation?
and it's wrong it assume that it's a fact, much less a well
accepted fact.
There are other ideas out there, including other scientific ideas.Sure, very low free oxygen then. In terms of the reason I originally brought it up (the chemistry of alkaline hydrothermal vents) it works out the same.
There's a lot of interesting things, published online, on the
topic of a-priori assumptions. I know you're plenty familiar
with the concept and the pitfalls but maybe a reminder?
I would take it as a confirmation that you think things like "there wasn't free oxygen in the atmosphere in that Hadean" are faith, but then you say this:If abiotic oxygen is a myth, life has already been discovered
on Mars. Ganymede. Europa.
I didn't say "useful", I said "superior to all others in scope, specificity, evidential support and predictive power". I'm happy to justify each of those claims, is there one you have particular objections to or that you want me to start with?the alkaline hydrothermal vent hypothesis is far and away superior to all others in scope, specificity, evidential support and predictive power.Lol! Nothing is useful unless and until life is spontaneously
formed under laboratory conditions. AND THEN that's when the
debate begins! Because it won't "Prove" that it ever happened
in nature, only that it is not excluded.
I wasn't aware I was doing that, could you clarify? The criteria I listed are actual rules science uses to evaluate hypotheses, they're very much a part of the "stepping outside of yourself" and "removing the human element" that you describe.It's especially superior to panspermia which isn't even so much aScience is about stepping outside of yourself. That is literally
hypothesis as a vague notion that doesn't actually explain the origin of life.
why it exists. Humans are so biased that we need a specific
set of rules, a process we must follow to keep up from latching
onto whatever our knee-jerk tells us.
Science was created to remove the human element.
You're insisting that the human element is what validates the
work.
Not really; the lab is a controlled environment that allows one to narrow down the causes of any given phenomenon. This includes natural or nonsentient causes.The problem with Creationism is that abiogenesis, in a lab, wouldThere's also creationism, yes.>
Sure. I figured that since you were talking about a spectrum of complexity in things that actually exist from life to nonlife that the context of this thread was naturalistic explanations.
be an example of same. So you're not escaping Creationism with
such goals, you're trying to validate it with an actual example!
Ironic, I know.
It's not circular, it's a positive claim that I gave a number of justifications for earlier and am happy to give more (but I already proposed that higher up so we can keep it there). And of course anybody making a contradictory claim is disagreeing with me, that's the nature of positive claims. The next step is for me to defend my claim, those that disagree to make counter-arguments, etc.Sure, and the alkaline hydrothermal vent hypothesis is really good in comparison to pretty much all of the other ideas on abiogenesisRather circular, that. And anyone proposing a different answer
would be definition be disagreeing with you.
What do you have in common with all of them? That's a start.I assume you're proposing something that you think is possible to do, even somewhat practical given you think it's a better approach than all other ones, so for example it wouldn't involve mapping every individual particle of matter including those contained in the paper or computers this map would be published in. Some categorization would be involved. What level of category do you have in mind? Like, what might a typical entry in the database look like? What size database do you think would be possible or reasonable?
And I'm telling you most of that spectrum is empty, shows a huge gulf.>
That would be more convincing if either one of us could point to
such a spectrum -- mapped out, scientifically. But we can't. So
you are arguing... what?Here's me pointing->:This is usenet. The internet. I just read a claim that the exact same
...water&lower -> Tornadoes, crystals, abiotic autocatalytic reactions, alcohol -> polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, long alkanes -> [huge gap] -> most viruses -> giant viruses, intracellular parasites? -> prokaryotic cells -> eukaryotic cells & higher...
scientists who worked out the date, time & location of the eclipse
are the people who have determined that Gwobull Warbling is REEL!
Matter exists along a spectrum. All matter. Map it out. Speaking
rhetorically. Not saying you should do it but I am saying that it
needs to be done. >Shouldn't be too hard for you to fill that gap if what you're saying is true.And yet we both know that it's never been done.
The spectrum isn't empty, it's ignored.How could we tell the difference ?Someone could attempt to map out all life and non life: Matter.
The claim is that the very same nature which produced diamonds
and forms lithium can also produce life. This life is not a
separate and distinct form of matter, it lies along a spectrum.
This much is a fact.
To claim anything else is to argue divine intervention!
So if we understand that spectrum we understand life, and an
understanding of that spectrum begins with actually mapping
it out.
I'm sad you snipped the parenthetical right after that where I confessed to cheekiness but added the actual serious answer, which was that alkaline hydrothermal vents are definitely, indubitably an environment that ever existed on this Earth which MIGHT've resulted in abiogenesis. That's a pretty low bar you set with the "might", maybe lower than you indended. If you disagree that the AHV hypothesis flies right over it you'd need to show some reason abiogenesis couldn't have occurred there. Do you have any in mind?I mean, obviously every element of that spectrum has to have been realized at some point, or abiogenesis couldn't have happened.>
We're back to being faith-based. Abiogenesis is not the only
game in town. And even if it did happen somewhere on the
surface of a planet, this may not have been that planet! It
may literally be impossible to identify any environment that
had ever existed on this Earth which might've resulted in
abiogenesis... if it ever happened anywhere.Nah it's not impossible, several perfectly cromulent candidates were identified including the one it actually happened in which is alkaline hydrothermal vents.Nah, you're trolling.
It's continuous and has no endpoints for there to be intermediates to, but in a context that introduces endpoints and discretization (like for example an argument over "can we measure any wavelengths between red and blue") it can be described that way can't it? I can't tell if we actually disagree on this paragraph or if there's a phrasing issue.So switch the focus. Study things that are real, that actually
exist.I'm extremely confused. Are you saying there are tons of entities that exist today that are intermediate steps between life and non-life such that no complexity gap between the two exist, but also life didn't start from non-life? Or all the entities are somewhere other than Earth?Is that how you see the Electromagnetic Spectrum? As a series of
intermediate steps?
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