01-13-2007, 12:41 PM | #361 | ||||||
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Again a better choice to demonstrate faith in science would have been something less concrete and measurable. Things like strings, potential energy, gravitons, gravity waves, extra dimensions, ect... Last edited by Sithdarth; 01-13-2007 at 12:48 PM. |
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01-13-2007, 01:17 PM | #362 | |
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01-13-2007, 02:14 PM | #363 | |||||
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Once he does succeed, if he does succeed, it'll be on Nature.com or Science.com and NOT on Popsci.com... and working in molecular biology, I'll likely know about it the moment he succeeds. And if you think I'm alone in that, you might want to consider than the guy who's doing this has very little credibility, so the odds of him succeeding are very slim. That makes sense considering popsci.com isn't really considered a legitimate scientific source... if he had credibility, I'm pretty sure he'd be on Nature or Science. So there you go. Crackpot scientist with crackpot experiment with crackpot methodology that he can't even make work. Sure its a neat idea, but until he gets proven right his hypothesis hold little to no value in the real world. I repeat, how is that valid in our current argument?
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01-13-2007, 03:13 PM | #364 | |||||||
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Secondly, all scientific research starts, at least in part, with speculation. Otherwise why do the experiment if there is nothing to prove. This is way one must speculate. Its kind of what makes theories theories. Also, thank you for assuming I had no scientific background what soever. I mean its not like it was possible with my obviously deep understanding of a lot of the laws of physics doesn't suggest something like I might be working on a bachelors in physics or anything. Quote:
Additionally, you seem to be getting a tad worked up here, as evidenced by the sudden appearance of capitalized phrases and the sudden personal attacks on my ability to reason and my potential experience. Perhaps a break is in order. |
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01-13-2007, 03:45 PM | #365 | |||
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First of all I apologize for implying you don't know anything about science. You know more about physics than me. I'll downgrade that to I know a lot more about biology than you.
Second of all I don't pretend I can prove God's existence. Reread this thread if you want, I haven't even tried. Quote:
Third of all, grant size and whoever the hell his chemist is doesn't make his HYPOTHESIS (stop calling it a theory... its not a theory... its a hypothesis, otherwise known as an unproven guess) any more accurate. Lots of grant money is a sign of knowing who to talk to and how to persuade people into giving you money, not a sign of legitimacy or accuracy. And I fail to see how having a talented chemist gives credence to his hypothesis? You have no way of knowing what is motivating the guy to do the chemistry for it, it could be purely financial or perhaps he wants to try and prove abiogenesis as well. Fourthly, all organic molecules (except for those small amino acids successfully made in a lab) come from life at somepoint. A bone isn't alive, but without life you'd never get that bone. Same thing with the nucleotides and lipids and enzymes, without life being already present, he'd never have access to them. Fifthly I realize speculation is a part of science. But speculation isn't evidence. You want to know what you said when you linked the article first? Quote:
Sixthly, I was getting annoyed because of you sarcastic tone in your previous post (does the words "oh wait" ring a bell?), and the fact that you put words in my mouth (implying that I was saying the research should be scratched, when I was saying the research wasn't even finished). So in conclusion, all you have succeeded in proving with this guy is that there's a couple of scientists out there who have a currently untested, unsupported hypothesis of how abiogenesis could have worked, that very few other scientists even think is right. Congratulations. Once again, I ask, until this research is finished, how does it have any impact on this thread? Answer: It doesn't.
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Last edited by I_Like_Swordchucks; 01-13-2007 at 03:48 PM. |
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01-13-2007, 05:33 PM | #366 |
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Well, it has a small impact. If someone can't think of any way abiogenesis could have possibly happened, this is an example.
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01-13-2007, 06:47 PM | #367 | ||
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And in Sithdarth's original post he still said that it shows how abiogenesis works, and my response is still 'no it doesn't'.
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01-13-2007, 11:40 PM | #368 | ||||||
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Except I never claimed it as proof. Here is what I originally said:
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01-14-2007, 12:28 AM | #369 |
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You know what, I'd like to go back and harp on that Deem Rich site a bit more, because now I'm actually feeling that I gave it too much credit.
The first and most convincing argument it presents is that the universe must have been intelligently designed. It says that this must be so because the universe is so "fine tuned" in its constants and laws to allow a variety of elements exist. What this actually proves is that, statistically, it's extremely unlikely that a single universe like this one could have arisen by chance. Let's just say it's impossible. Now, the multiverse theory could explain this, but the guy says there's no backing for such a theory, and like a fool, I believed him. In fact, the very idea that a single universe like this one is impossible is the very justification for a multiverse: this is but one out of infinite (?) shots. Instead, Deem says the universe was made this way on purpose, and thus intelligently. That's only a partial explanation, though. There's still the matter of why an intelligent force would desire to create a universe like this one and not of a different form. It wants life? Worshipers? Pretty planets? Pretty (sub)atomic structures? Could be a lot of reasons, and many of those in no way imply the "loving" Christian god. Plus, it further complicates the hypothesis, since it's not just an intelligent force that created the universe, it's an intelligent force with a motive to create a universe like this one. This doesn't instantly hit me as any less convoluted than the realization of all possibilities. |
01-14-2007, 12:50 AM | #370 |
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Also, there's no proof that if the universe had come about differently, that different forms of life wouldn't have evolved in it, and then gone off about how their universe is perfect for them, and thus it must have been intelligently desigend.
It's not that the universe is perfectly fine-tuned for our survival. It's that we are perfectly fine-tuned for the universe we arose in.
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