Black Rose
An unbreakable bond
How exactly did this evolve? Abiogenesis seems unlikely. Where else could it have come from but The Creator (God). Bible is irreverent to this topic so please don't bring up creationism.

Ask a biologist?
From the future? What do we currently know?
So one should fill uncertainty with a deity? Quantum physics operate on chance and uncertainty. So in a universe were the fundemental forces are guided by uncertainty, the development of complex mechanisms is only possible through intellegent design, and not by chance, a fundemental denominator?
I scoff at replacing uncertainty with the certainty of a deity.
Problem with the human mind is that it can only use processes with predictable outcomes (more or less the same as linear processes). Nature can sample from whatever process it likes, and does so from all processes simultaneously, and thus can create things that would be almost impossible to think up when using only linear processes.
To understand complex behavior we need to research complex functions. Go study chaos theory, non-linear dynamics, and the likes, and you'll become much less phased by this seemingly impossible complexity and grace.
An series of an infinite number of accidents over trillions of years each contradicting the second law of thermodynamics along the way?
Okay, I'm even less convinced you're for real. This one sentence requires four errors of understanding. Most creationists can't even pack their sentences that full of shit.
Frankly, I don't know exactly what's known. I'm not a biologist. That's why I suggested you ask one. Mayhaps a Google search would be the next best thing if you can't find one. I've emailed, and gotten a reply from, Dr. Kenneth Miller, though, as well as several other professional biologists. You could at least try to get a hold of them and ask though, no?From the future? What do we currently know?
1. Specific to the ribosome, spindles guided by an as of yet unknown cellular mechanism.How exactly did this evolve?
Same question: What is life?Currently, we know that from extreme simplicity can arise extreme complexity, from the laws of physics. It is infinitely improbable that there is then an omnipotent omniscient etc creator who cares about us in any way (a meaningless dust of life when there is, most likely, more life in the universe) and that nature seems to work perfectly without.
Enlightenment, you say?Not to mention that the idea of the god started when we had no chance at all of understanding the world around us. It happened after the cognitive revolution, after the part in which we developed abstract functions of our brains, i.e. could imagine things that aren't really there. I wander why.
This is bull. Nothing is experienced or interpreted objectively, nor can it be. It's equally irrational to rule out possibilities that one cannot comprehend or conceive.We live in the age where we can go beyond our primitive subjectivities. Everything else is a disgrace.
I am speaking generally about how you definitely should not be biased in the favor of the existence of any deities, it is simply irrational to be.
Divine uncertainty ftw. Hail Eris!So one should fill uncertainty with a deity?
Or does it actually operate on agency?Quantum physics operate on chance and uncertainty.
Reciprocal causality much?So in a universe were the fundemental forces are guided by uncertainty, the development of complex mechanisms is only possible through intellegent design, and not by chance, a fundemental denominator?
I scoff at replacing uncertainty with the certainty of a deity.
If you already knew I was being sarcastic:
please be specific and deconstruct the sentence you've quoted and specifically delineate the "four errors of understanding".
An series of an infinite
Accidents require some kind of plan which goes awry in the first place, whereas here there's no indication of a plan or accidents in or against it's favor.number of accidents
Hasn't been that many.over trillions of years
No biological theory contradicts the second law of thermodynamics.each contradicting the second law of thermodynamics along the way?
Indeed.ROTFLOL
The limit of evolution.Infinity isn't claimed by any biological theory.
Life is an organized process. Recall the subforum you're in and its unfriendliness to "objective" absolutes.No biological theory contradicts the second law of thermodynamics.
Infinity isn't claimed by any biological theory.
Accidents require some kind of plan which goes awry in the first place, whereas here there's no indication of a plan or accidents in or against it's favor.
Hasn't been that many.
No biological theory contradicts the second law of thermodynamics.
The limit of evolution.
No biological theory contradicts the second law of thermodynamics, though, including evolution. If it did, either it would get dropped as a theory, or the second law would get dropped as a law. So, basically, either prove the theory contradicts the second law and become rich and famous, or just make wild claims on an internet forum.Life is an organized process. Recall the subforum you're in and its unfriendliness to "objective" absolutes.
No biological theory contradicts the second law of thermodynamics, though, including evolution. If it did, either it would get dropped as a theory, or the second law would get dropped as a law. So, basically, either prove the theory contradicts the second law and become rich and famous, or just make wild claims on an internet forum.
Biology says nothing about space and time. It talks about life and what it does within space and time.So how does your version of biology explain the origin of time and space, then?
Not really, though I get what you're saying in the respect that it's an equal Markov option.The absence of a plan is still a plan.
Both humbug.Furthermore I submit one piece of evidence.
Evidence of accidents against a higher order's plan: Trisomy 21.
It hinges on the nature of the universe, which we've already discussed ad nauseum. Why so obsessed with this pseudo-objectivity fetish of yours?
No biological theory contradicts the second law of thermodynamics.
Its really quite simple. Its not that the second law of thermodynamics contradicts the evidence or the beliefs of those who believe in the existence of a higher power/ influence. In fact, the second law of thermodynamics completely ratifies/ justifies this belief in the existence of a higher ordering power/ influence. A the same time, the second law of thermodynamics (if true) clearly contradicts the (atheistic) idea that you can get something from nothing:
Posit 3 is a question, not something being posited. I'll answer it, even; Life gets energy from food. Some life eats other life or bio-matter or whatever, and other life gets energy from the sun, thus all life gets their energy, directly or indirectly, from the sun. The sun's energy comes from the interaction of it's own mass, it's gravity forcing nuclear fusion under extreme pressure. This source of energy does not get replenished. The sun will die in ~5 billion years.Posit #1: Entropy exists
then
Posit #2: the second law of thermodynamics is valid
then
posit #3: what provides the fuel of the higher order which is required to be fed to the systems whose existence depends on entropy? (biological life forms)
Good for them, I suppose, but so what? Believing something exists isn't a good reason to suppose you're correct.then
Posit #4a: those who believe in a higher ordering power/ influence governing the production of fuel for entropic systems have an explanation. Albeit fuzzy, there is an explanation beginning with, if nothing more even, the position that this higher power exists (whatever exactly it is)
Firstly, I do have a basic understanding of Big Bang cosmology, so I actually do have a partial answer. Well, part of a partial answer. Secondly, I don't suppose the lack of an answer means the guy who claims to have one is then necessarily correct. It used to be believed that lightning was the direct action of gods, but now we understand that it's not. The fact that people didn't understand how lightning worked back then doesn't mean the people claiming it was a god were defaulted into the "correct answer" slot. If I don't have an answer for something, then I don't have an answer for it. I'd prefer the answer, but I'm not going to make up whatever I want and then pretend it's the answer. That's an argument from ignorance, and specifically a god-of-the-gaps fallacy.Posit #4b: those who don't believe in a higher ordering power/ influence have no explanation at all. Atheists demand one believe in the "miracle" of something from nothing.
Do cars reproduce with variation, and are they subject to attrition?Cars do not violate the laws of thermodynamics yet without intelligence no cars are made by the so called laws.
So to with biology. You expect cars(biology) to rise from the primordial ooze unabated by matters ineptitude. This is akin to expecting the sphinx being sculpted by the wind with desert sand.
Do cars reproduce with variation, and are they subject to attrition?
You did not answer my question. Do cars reproduce with variation, and are they subject to attrition?Variation must first have structure otherwise it reduced to simplicity. The wrongs that we face may only be that we first had to be given even a single gift of having beginning to try for purpose. I do not preclude the necessity of evolution. Only that epigenetics explains variation so that the fossils could not be known as the same or separate species.
You did not answer my question. Do cars reproduce with variation, and are they subject to attrition?
Then how is it a valid comparison when those are the two necessary components of biological evolution?
Then how is it a valid comparison when those are the two necessary components of biological evolution?
evolution natural selection is not abiogenesis. Only when the first life began does natural selection take effect. Explain the beginning of Life.
Guided by what process/force?Or that is my understanding anyway![]()
proc·ess1
ˈpräˌsesˈpräsəsˈprō-
noun
1.
a series of actions or steps taken in order to achieve a particular end.
Guided by what process/force?
Basically, how is consciousness derived from nonconsciousness?
Drop a glass cup it shatters. Drop the shatters the cup reforms?
Begin with a big bang a universe appears from gas. Begin with another bang and everything is hats that clump to together?
Where does order come from GodOfOrder? Even chaos follows mathematics. Do cell form from the fractal mind of God?
Not my job. Ask a biologist. Everything I learned about biology in the last decade was learned online or from discussions with actual biologists (I wasn't even in college, I simply went up to them or emailed them. Unless they're in a hurry, they won't just ignore a sincere question), both of which are things you can do. It's a lot of information, and I remember a minority of it at best.evolution by natural selection is not abiogenesis. Only when the first life began does natural selection take effect. Explain the beginning of Life.
Why does order require a cause? Why can't it simply be an innate aspect of the universe?Where does order come from GodOfOrder?
Likely little bits of amino acids congealed over time. Eventually, some clusters were able to replicate. They continued to do so until they were either supplanted, destroyed, or established their dominance in the system. These replicators then probably began to form little lipid sacks around themselves for protection. They continued to replicate. As time went on they continued to grow in sophistication, through adaptation by natural selection. Eventually these primitive replicators became what we call "cells". It was ground up the whole way. Or that is my understanding anyway![]()
Sure. Seems legit. Now, where did the little bits of amino acids, their context, and the energy in the system surrounding them come from in the first place?
Those who believe in a higher ordering power/ influence have an answer (though perhaps fuzzy at times).
Those who do not...do not. (but generally they refuse to admit it and go to great lengths to obfuscate their lack of explanation).
Sure. Seems legit. Now, where did the little bits of amino acids, their context, and the energy in the system surrounding them come from in the first place?
Those who believe in a higher ordering power/ influence have an answer (though perhaps fuzzy at times).
Those who do not...do not. (but generally they refuse to admit it and go to great lengths to obfuscate their lack of explanation).
The argument that, 'science can't explain it' isn't an argument for a creator.
Why does order require a cause? Why can't it simply be an innate aspect of the universe?
The context is a young earth with frothing, mineral rich, seas and good temperatures. (By the way scientists have, in flasks, created similar conditions and found that amino acids tend to form) The energy comes from the sun and outer space, the same places that it has always come from. You don't really need much more of a jump start than that. It is just a matter of waiting until these amino acids form into something that replicates, and at that stage life behaves more like some mechanical algorithm than anything else. And the simple fact is, where eternity is concerned, the likelihood that something will eventually arise is high, even if that particular outcome is in itself improbable.
"Waiting" for an infinite series of permutations to create a higher order without outside interventions would be moronic as the likelihood of chance providing the opposite of entropy is perhaps, at best, infinitely impossible (or at least an asymptote's approaching infinity of nothing worth of hope).
you say, "And the simple fact is, where eternity is concerned, the likelihood that something will eventually arise is high, even if that particular outcome is in itself improbable"![]()