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in this particular experiment nobody assembled the components, they just mixed up the gases believed to comprise Earth's atmosphere billions of years ago, added an occasional spark to simulate lightning and analysed the mixture after a couple of weeks. the 'assembling' part took care of itself, a result of natural laws. the same laws that brought the same components to the surface of the Earth over four billion years ago. of course there are criticisms of these experiments, the primary one being that Earth's primordial atmosphere was not as reducing as assumed in the experiment. this is still open for debate, but even if so it would basicly just slow down the formation of complex organic molecules, they would still form eventually. there was plenty of time...</font>[/QUOTE]"Nobody assembled the components? They just mixed up the gasses believed to comprise the earths atmosphere????? Are you even aware of the contradiction? Were the gasses just in the lab already or did you humans intending on doing the experiment ensure the gasses were there? Secondly, you "added an occassional spark" Finally, there was an intent behind the whole process!! No, it is impossible to replicate what you believe happened, because once you do anything to create or simulate the environment, you are doing exactly what I believe happened. CREATING. You are simulating an intended creation, not a random occurence. The existence of a director. A creative mind behind the whole process is what I am talking about. A creator vastly increases the odds of the whole thing taking place, in fact there are no odds, because it falls to intent not chance. Quote:
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You're working on proving the HOW, but that doesn't take a creator out of the picture. You're adding a spark, he added a spark. You put the gasses together, he put the gasses together. In my perception you're doing a great job of replicating creation, not chance. ;) Power to you though. Hope you find out more. I love discovering the how, who and why. Quote:
The variables in the earths development are unthinkably large. The rotational axis, the closeness to the sun, the moons effect, the levels of oxygen balanced with carbon dioxide, the heat of the core, the radiation shields in the atmosphere... it goes on and on. All the variables need to be accounted for and tested with and without. Would life have developed if the planet was closer to the sun? But then the closeness creates a whole other set of variables. I am happy not knowing, and exploring what we DO know, and CAN know, while reveling in the mystery. We were not there. We did not see. At most we can speculate on the evidence we have, but what if a key component is missing? Gone? We would never even know. Quote:
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BTW, I disagree with your belief that a creator would induce more chances of sentient beings in the universe. I believe the opposite : if there is no creator, then the requisite is "There exists sentient life forms" - any kind; if there is, then the requisite is the above plus all additional requisites the creator selects. The more the requisites, the less the chances. [img]smile.gif[/img] Or maybe there are many many creators out there. ;) |
After getting a chastising from Yorick about it, I now renew my earlier objection. And, no, it's not the kind of thing for pm so long as he insists on preaching herein. Yorick, whatever the merits of your post to frudi, please, based on the fact that it skirts over the line on the moratorium, take it to pm.
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just to let you know where I'm coming from, I've preached the same thing about 10^-43 of a second after the event as you, how be it in realtion to time and the infinite vs. the finite. |
It's hard for people to grasp something that has no beginning. If the Universe is infinite then there will always be something before and after. As human we want to astablish clear boundries. If all these random events happened here to produce life and the universe is infinate deductive logic would suggest life elseware. We can't prove it but we sure can make an educated guess.
The only reason I would want immortality is to see the vastness of the universe. It excites me so much to think how much more there is for us to see. |
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BTW, I disagree with your belief that a creator would induce more chances of sentient beings in the universe. I believe the opposite : if there is no creator, then the requisite is "There exists sentient life forms" - any kind; if there is, then the requisite is the above plus all additional requisites the creator selects. The more the requisites, the less the chances. [img]smile.gif[/img] Or maybe there are many many creators out there. ;) </font>[/QUOTE]Well it's good to see you. I don't have an email address for you anymore. Can you PM one? I only have the wanadoo one. Re. the creator argument, fair enough and I respect your view. We've agreed to disagree for ages now. ;) [img]smile.gif[/img] |
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Right, that's enough of the personal stuff, can everyone get back on topic now??
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I agree it is a brain bending concept to get your head around, considering that our own self aware memory has a sequential limit - ie beginning. |
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