There is an activity which creates and interprets the information. — Metaphysician Undercover
And which bit of this creating and interpreting of genetic information can’t be explained by physicalism? — apokrisis
You say logically there must be something beyond the physical goings on. And yet there is no evidence of that. — apokrisis
That is not explained by physicalism, which refers to some unsupported, random and therefore unreasonable speculation of abiogenesis. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are aiming at the story that we aspire to the kind of rational perception that a creator would be endowed with. We are cut down gods rather than cranked up animals. — apokrisis
As accidents go, in a place like a warm alkaline sea vent, it was an accident waiting to happen. — apokrisis
And I don’t know if the Greek philosophers really did think in terms of a ‘creator God’ — Wayfarer
there’s no biological reason why a species ought to be able to know the kinds of things we already know — Wayfarer
But you show no signs of being up to date on that science. Read Parfit gave you excellent reading suggestions from a researcher in the front line. So your comment here is supported only by your ignorance of the available evidence. — apokrisis
Nick Lane’s latest book indeed makes the case that life anywhere could only take the form of electron respiratory chains and proton gradients. — apokrisis
This is a neat conclusion as it fits the predictions of a biosemiotic approach to abiogenesis. — apokrisis
And it even flows from the very particle asymmetry that permits a Cosmos that is more than just a featureless bath of radiation.
A universe with proper matter - lumpy bits of gravitating stuff with charges and sub-lightspeed inertial freedoms - is only possible because electrons wound up having the negative charge, and protons the positive charge.
And then life also depends on this fortunate asymmetry. Because of the physical size difference, electrons could be used to capture the energy to drive life as a process. Protons then could release this energy back in a controlled fashion to spin the molecular machinery.
So it is not all a tale of irrational randomness. — apokrisis
Suddenly all it took was a membrane to hold protons back and then a turnstile to let them pass in a regulated fashion. — apokrisis
As accidents go, in a place like a warm alkaline sea vent, it was an accident waiting to happen. — apokrisis
Nick Lane’s latest book indeed makes the case that life anywhere could only take the form of electron respiratory chains and proton gradients. — apokrisis
This is consistent with my claim. At the bottom of such physical activity, the most fundamental, there is still a need to conclude existence of the non-physical to account for the cause of existence of such physical activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Abiogenesis is unsupported, random speculation, therefore unreasonable. — Metaphysician Undercover
I read some of the referrals, I found it wildly speculative, as I said, and uninteresting. Read Parfit seems to try to make a point by referral, and I don't like that form of argument. If Read understands the material, why not explain it to me in a way which relates to my point, rather than referring me to various articles, which don't seem to be relevant to the point I am making. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no logical “need” to conclude the existence of “non-physical” entities being the cause of physical activity. That is just a theory with without meat on the bone. — Read Parfit
You find broadly plausible scientific theories related to abiogenesis “uninteresting”, and “don’t like that” I refer you to the source of my claims. — Read Parfit
The living physical body came into existence as an organized structure — Metaphysician Undercover
By “the living body” do you mean the first living bodies? By that I mean bacteria and their predecessors existing ~3 billion years ago? — Read Parfit
I'll spell it out again so you don't have to go back. The living physical body came into existence as an organized structure. Therefore the "organizer" precedes the physical body. It is well known from the observation of inanimate physical things, that no inanimate physical thing is capable of doing such organizing. Therefore the organizer must be non-physical. — Metaphysician Undercover
The only objection came from apokrisis who said that there is no evidence of anything "non-physical". But both wayfarer and I replied by referring to the fact that the evidence of the non-physical is right there within our own minds. — Metaphysician Undercover
To simply ignore this logic, and proceed to adopt abiogenesis as a principle, and then attempt in some haphazard way to support abiogenesis with science, is nothing other than unreasonable behaviour. Did you read my reply to apokrisis, who postulates the magical appearance of a membrane? — Metaphysician Undercover
Did you read my reply to apokrisis, who postulates the magical appearance of a membrane? — Metaphysician Undercover
Logically, C could be tossed. Whether or not something is “well known” does not make it true or false, and we have already established a physical body needing an “organizer” in A and B. — Read Parfit
Logically, D is pulled from thin air. You made no case why the “organiser” “must be non-physical”. — Read Parfit
Your use of the word “must” in D is further called into question given an alternate "organizer" has been described as alkaline hydrothermal vents in a broadly plausible scientific theory that does not require any non-physical entities. — Read Parfit
I think I owe Wayfarer a response on this subject a few pages back. Regardless, I don’t think you are going to get to a “must” in D from “non-physical in right there within our own minds”, but try me :) — Read Parfit
Yes, and I thought your use of the word "magical" was an attempt to substitute sarcasm for an actual counter argument. — Read Parfit
I found it wildly speculative, as I said, and uninteresting. — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, so your dismissing inductive reasoning as not capable of assuring truth. That's not an unusual tactic, but we might just as well say that we can never be sure that a premise is true. — Metaphysician Undercover
OK then, here's the issue. We observe all sorts of things which have been created artificially through human activity. I think you will agree with that. The dualist apprehends what is obvious, that non-physical things like ideas and concepts, and the associated activities of reason, logic, intention and will, are responsible for the coming into being of these artificial things. The physicalist, for some unknown reason denies the obvious, that these things are non-physical, but then has no real way to account for the coming into being of artificial things. Artificial things are seen as natural, coming into being as a natural effect of living things. This just defers the problem because the coming into being of living things needs to be accounted for. — Metaphysician Undercover
The logical problem with C is that it is not even wrong. C only argues that it is well known that no inanimate physical thing is capable of doing such organizing. — Read Parfit
I think that is your intended point, and gives you a more plausible line to keeping D intact? — Read Parfit
In the interest of giving you a concise response, can you give a couple of examples of artificially created things you are referring to? If you are talking about maths, for instance, I think abstract is more concise term than artificial. — Read Parfit
My use of "magic" was warranted. Apokrisis described at length, how the existence of life is dependent on an asymmetrical relation between protons and electrons, as if this were the essence of life. Then apokriisis casually added "suddenly all it took was a membrane". So the key feature, which accounts for the emergence of life is not the asymmetrical relation between photons and electrons, but the magical appearance of this special membrane. It's not hard to refute an argument for abiogenesis which relies on the magical appearance of a special membrane. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your use of the word “magic” in relation to membrane assembly reveals a lack of understanding in how atoms and molecules ‘want’ to act according to these forces apokriisis described.
If you take a spoonful of lipids and place them in a cup of water that is in the right temperature range, these lipids will quickly assemble into the same type of membrane that encase our cells. — Read Parfit
Sure, but they are already lipids. I used "magic" to refer to apokrisis' description of the appearance of the membrane, as if it just suddenly appeared without the need for any prior lipids or proteins. if you want to go further and talk about the creation of lipids and proteins, prior to the creation of a membrane I'm still going to ask the same questions, where did the lipids come from, spontaneous generation (magic)? — Metaphysician Undercover
Tim Requarth, reviewing The Vital Question for The New York Times, notes that Charles Darwin had speculated that life might have begun in some "warm little pond", but Lane shows this could not have happened. Instead, Lane argues that, in Requarth's words, "life emerged from towering rock formations on the ocean floor, where heated, mineral-laden water spewed from the inner Earth through the rock’s hollow network of cell-size compartments. These rocks contained the ingredients necessary for life’s start, but most important, their natural temperature and energy gradients favored the formation of large molecules." The resulting proton gradient drives "a remarkable, turbinelike protein, ATP synthase" to rotate, capturing energy in usable chemical form. "This bizarre mechanism, as universal as DNA, is as counterintuitive as anything in science", observes Requarth, who finds the book "seductive and often convincing, though speculation far outpaces evidence in many of the book’s passages. But perhaps for a biological theory of everything, that’s to be expected, even welcomed.
Notice the quote "speculation far outpaces evidence in many of the book's passages". As I explained to you, it is a waste of time to read speculation which goes in the wrong direction. The evidence is on the side of the non-physical. — Metaphysician Undercover
Let me rephrase C then, if you want to nit pick. No inanimate physical thing is capable of doing such organizing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Have we put to bed the issue of whether lipids and lipid membranes can spontaneously form in the right conditions through atomic forces? — Read Parfit
I'll start my critique of C2 by pointing out that “inanimate” can have multiple meanings. — Read Parfit
I suspect you mean the old school ‘there is no life in an element on the periodic table’ kind of definition, but that does not explain how lipids can spontaneously form, in the right conditions, and then organize themselves into membranes. If you peer into the world of protons and electrons, one finds their actions far from inanimate. — Read Parfit
Every so called “inanimate” component inside a ‘living’ cell physically acts and reacts on its own, in accordance with the atomic forces of the molecules they are comprised of and surrounded by, and the cell itself is acting and reacting with atomic forces in its environment. — Read Parfit
I would call that magic. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm educated in high school chemistry, biology, and physics. The existence of lipids is not caused by "atomic forces". You really don't seem to know what you're talking about. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think the facts support my assertion that lipids spontaneously form in the right conditions like those that exist in a alkaline hydrothermal vent. — Read Parfit
That's why Requarth said "speculation far outpaces evidence" in Lane's book, and why I say you invoke the magical appearance of a membrane. — Metaphysician Undercover
Notice the quote "speculation far outpaces evidence in many of the book's passages". — Metaphysician Undercover
At the moment, I am reading Nick Lane’s new book “The Vital Question, Energy, Evolution, and the Origins of Complex Life.” — Read Parfit
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