Evolution is the process of any change over time. In a more narrow biological sense, evolution is random spread of differences followed by statistical natural selection of traits. General evolution is not at all concerned with the peculiarity of life on this planet but with the universe as a whole and all of its developments.In simple terms - that single evolutionary mechanism is the Living Cell, and there is no conceivable way that anyone has found to produce the true complexity of the 1st living cell from the sterile chemicals of the early Earth, without a prior living cell to do it. That is the dilemma. — Gary Enfield
So the mystery of the origin of life is very real. — Gary Enfield
It is generally portrayed by media outlets that the origin of life can simply be explained by Evolution - yet the only known mechanism for evolution that we have discovered in the universe simply cannot do it. — Gary Enfield
Abiogenesis has failed to show that all of the 22 necessary amino acids for life can be generated from the same chemical mix/start point, because chemical environments necessary for some amino acids would be harmful to others. They also require a certain mix of base chemicals to achieve the chemical make up of DNA and RNA - chemicals - and those chemicals were not thought to be present on earth - but only in surrounding space at best. — Gary Enfield
...forming just a simple average protein (involving a thousand or more amino acids) from just the necessary 22 amino acid components, (out of a selection of 500), by chance alone, — Gary Enfield
So the mystery of the origin of life is very real. — Gary Enfield
The only ones I've seen who do are creationism apologists trying to undermine the credibility of current science. — T Clark
Even if you could find an alternate mechanism for accurate chemical reproduction - what could give it its sense of direction before life had an in interest in preserving itself. Whatever factor could apply to chemicals alone, to start giving an evolutionary direction in favour of life? — Gary Enfield
What concerns me about the scientific analysis, is that it often can't help but be reductionist: to declare that life is simply a complex transactional relationship between various classes of molecules. I can see why that kind of analysis appeals to engineers (like yourself!), but I think it leaves something out. — Wayfarer
One of the questions to ask, is if the origin of life occurs naturally as a result of the concatenation of favourable circumstances, why doesn't it continue to happen? — Wayfarer
The problem it articulates is that of intention - that life, even the very simplest forms of life, seem to possess an intentional aim, namely, to survive and propagate. And it's hard to imagine how 'the intention to survive' could even be concieved in terms of chemical replication. — Wayfarer
Survival has nothing to do with intention or purpose — T Clark
Do you think a bacterium has a "will to survive?" What does that even mean? — T Clark
Would I be right in guessing that is the sum total of your knowledge of that book ;-)
— Wayfarer
Yes, although I have read other writings that discuss the same issues — T Clark
Yes, I do. Of course, a bacterium doesn't *think* anything, or say 'oh shit I'm in trouble'. It's not a conscious being, or reflective, or intelligent. But it's a living organism, and living things are characterised by homeostasis. Note the action-verb in the definition of homeostasis: 'seeks equilibrium'. — Wayfarer
@T Clark already pointed out that it may be due to the fact that the evolutionary stage is already saturated with complex self-sustaining life and there are dominating forces already present. The evolutionary analogue of the first-to-market phenomenon. Another idea I can come up with, is that it is easier to create symbiotic relationship and leech to or collaborate with other lifeforms then to go your own way. The only way that the stage can be reset and start anew is if some grand catastrophy destroys the present status-quo, such as a meteorite tosses itself to earth, or a multi-host viral pandemic kills the apex species.One of the questions to ask, is if the origin of life occurs naturally as a result of the concatenation of favourable circumstances, why doesn't it continue to happen? Why are there no examples of transitional forms of living cells emerging spontaneously in the host volcanic springs (or wherever it is supposed to have happened) and recapitulating the origin process? Why is it that it is not occuring spontaneously today? Whereas, in reality, all organic life seems to encode a linear memory going back billions of years to the single point of origin. That must mean something. — Wayfarer
If by intention we mean complex multi-layered behavior, such as immediate reactions, situational tactical (i.e. modal) behavior, long-term strategic behavior, I am not sure that physicalists should oppose it. I wouldn't, with a physicalist hat on. What may appear controversial is why the behavior ends up being constructive to the sustenance of the organism. Why the intention is indeed directed towards life sustaining behavior. But considering that the spectrum of possible choices ultimately sorts into life-sustenance and life-cessation, I think that it is obvious that if life of both intentions (i.e. forms of complex strategic behavior patterns) proliferated at one point, the latter category would have become extinct, leaving the former to assume reign of our hereditary genetic chain.I think that is a well-formulated question. The problem it articulates is that of intention - that life, even the very simplest forms of life, seem to possess an intentional aim, namely, to survive and propagate. And it's hard to imagine how 'the intention to survive' could even be concieved in terms of chemical replication. It is precisely with the emergence of living things that intentional behaviour begins to manifest - yet 'intentionality' is just the very factor that physicalist accounts want to dispense with, because of its association with purpose and the dreaded 'telos' of Aristotelian philosophy. — Wayfarer
So, you think bacteria decide and desire. — T Clark
to be consistent you'd also have to think a plant has a will to seek the sun. — T Clark
Lao Tzu didn't even think people should be willful. Wu wei, action without acting, is acting without will. — T Clark
That's precisely what is missing in the materialist/physicalist account of living organisms - it is the one attribute it can't recognise, because it's not directly observable.
— Wayfarer
Then by what means did you learn that... — Isaac
both ‘will’ and ‘intentionality’ have broader meanings than simply human will or conscious intention. — Wayfarer
Chinese philosophy doesn’t really have a bearing on these questions which really are peculiar to the modern West. I think Schopenhauer’s conception of ‘will’ as a universal striving or wanting is much nearer the mark. — Wayfarer
I figure that other creatures are not so different to myself, whereas materialism wants to treat them, and me, as objects, saying that the sense of subject-hood can simply be eliminated. — Wayfarer
Missing links such as the ribozyme have been discovered, hybrids of protein and RNA segments that catalyze their own replicative processes. — Enrique
That's just describing the two positions. You said that something was missing from the materialist account that was not directly observable. I was asking you what that is. Is your answer that it's the "sense of subject-hood"? Presumably this is a feeling you have of some sort? So if I ask "Do you have a sense of subject-hood - yes [ ] , no [ ]" will I not have just measured it? — Isaac
You're doubtless aware of 'eliminative materialism', right? in fact, you'd be one of the advocates of this school on this site, right? So what is it that 'eliminative materialism' seeks to eliimate? What does it deny the existence of? Why does Daniel Dennett say 'the hard problem' is actually a problem at all? — Wayfarer
Eliminative materialism (or eliminativism) is the radical claim that our ordinary, common-sense understanding of the mind is deeply wrong and that some or all of the mental states posited by common-sense do not actually exist and have no role to play in a mature science of the mind. — SEP
So if I ask "Do you have a sense of subject-hood - yes [ ] , no [ ]" will I not have just measured it? — Isaac
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