"There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.” — Darwin
forms most beautiful — Darwin
Are really saying this in our time of genetics and cross-breed hybrids? Or imply that humans haven't bred animals and plants? Or impacted the globe by transporting animals and plants to places they weren't found before?Yet, we've never heard of scientists stating that they discovered a life-form has come into existence in the past 100 years. — TheMadFool
What do you mean 'new life'? New species? — StreetlightX
Are really saying this in our time of genetics and cross-breed hybrids? Or imply that humans haven't bred animals and plants? Or impacted the globe by transporting animals and plants to places they weren't found before? — ssu
I find the present conditions of the world - liquid water, air, temperature - actually perfect for life to begin, start from scratch. — TheMadFool
Note that the conditions of the Earth at the beginning of life were different from the present conditions. — jamalrob
Yes. Are the conditions now unfavorable? — TheMadFool
Yes, extremely so. Because the planet is already full of life. Any new lifeform would have to compete with what's already present, and since the existing life has a massive headstart, any upstarts have no chance. — Echarmion
I guess it's possible that life could be appearing quite often, and immediately being eaten by bacteria. — jamalrob
Isn't it odd ... — TheMadFool
If evolution is true then why aren't new life-forms popping into existence? — TheMadFool
Still I don't get your reasoning. It's as if you have made up your mind that somehow the evolution of new species has stopped.Please read my replies above. — TheMadFool
Nylon eating bacteria surely have not been around since nylon was made only in 1935 and the bacteria were only found in 1975. Bacteria, plants and insects are the first that can change fairly 'quicly'. And as humans have changed the landscape so much, species that have adapted to the urban environment are the obvious choice for new species to come around (as cities haven't been around for long). — ssu
If evolution is true then why aren't new life-forms popping into existence? — TheMadFool
So you aren't talking about evolution, but a repeat of abiogenesis: basically you are looking for a single cell organism to 'pop into existence' somewhere where there isn't life before. First problem is that we don't know exactly how it happened. Secondly, perhaps the places where abiogenesis happened have already life, which has made it a bit difficult to have that 'pristine state' where it would happen again...Where are the brand new, so to speak, organisms that, forgive my limited vocabulary, pop into existence like, presumably, the very first single-celled organism that came into existence a couple of billion years ago? — TheMadFool
3.5 billion years ago, which is actually pretty fast after the earth became somewhat suited for life. Then it took a very long time to evolve multi cellular life. — ChatteringMonkey
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