Problem is how do we determine something that is real or useful from something which is an internal conscious state, a hallucination, or a belief, or a feeling? — Tom Storm
I agree and this fits with the big bang, as one main theory is that quantum fluctuations split no energy into equal ammounts of positive and negative energy, just like how 0=10+(-10).I don’t believe it is possible for something to come from nothing and so everything that exist now, has always existed in some form. — Present awareness
I have always said that I believe in Evolution once the mechanism got going,. — Gary Enfield
Okay so you are arguing from a position of ignorance, saying in essence "I don't know therefore nobody will ever know". — Olivier5
And what the frick frack does "a smattering" mean here? — T Clark
Here is a link to an article that uses the purported impossibility of life self-generating to support the young earth argument. The process described is similar to the one you describe in the OP.
http://members.toast.net/puritan/Articles/HowOldIsTheEarth_A.htm — T Clark
A quibble - It is misleading use the word "evolutionary" in this context. It leads to confusion between two completely different processes - evolution and abiogenesis. The heart of our dispute seems to be that you are unwilling to acknowledge that. — T Clark
I am not trying to dismiss what you say, I am crudely trying to hone-in on the factors that would allow your theory to work - but I hope that I have illustrated the tip of the iceberg, and why may people seem skeptical of this approach, without being able to offer anything better. — Gary Enfield
quantum fluctuations split no energy into equal ammounts of positive and negative energy — scientia de summis
True, we have not generated what is obviously living from what is indisputably nonliving in the lab, but one would expect it difficult to extrapolate modern cells back to at least 550 million years ago, when the Cambrian explosion happened and macroscopic eukaryotes emerged. But the first signs of fossilized protocells are roughly four billion years old. — Enrique
The cytoplasm is full of both DNA and RNA, though we haven't discerned much of its function to this point. Cells are a teeming genetic ecosystem more than a kind of machinery, undeniably having arisen from membranes combining, dividing and engulfing at their characteristic speedy pace to proceed from the chemically simple to the more complex. — Enrique
To say that evolution acts only on animate matter implies evolution has an ability to distinguish between animate and inanimate matter. Is this what you are suggesting? — Pop
" there is only one known mechanism in the whole of existence - the living cell"
That is not so. A living cell is self organizing, but so is any random group of elements within a membrane. That they self organize is a mechanism - an omnipresent mechanism acting on everything in pockets of the universe that are not chaotic. So I think this is where you should start your enquiry. — Pop
A living cell may be a highly evolved version of a random group of elements within a cell - I'm not saying I can prove this, but this is one of the possibilities. If the right elements found themselves trapped in a cell and had to self organize, life may well emerge - in the right situation, at the right time. — Pop
.... by which I think you meant consciousness.animal or plant "conscience" — Adughep
When an experiment produces results, those results become a fact that has to be explained. Other than discovering error or fraud in the reporting of measurements etc., those facts become a permanent and unchanging record — Gary Enfield
How we interpret facts is ever changing as new philosophical ideas emerge - but the facts themselves don't change — Gary Enfield
the old facts don't go away, and must still be accommodated by any new theory. — Gary Enfield
So there no such thing as a fact in itself independent of a particular interpretation. Change the interpretation and you change the fact. — Joshs
quantum fluctuations split no energy into equal ammounts of positive and negative energy
— scientia de summis
One may not split zero into anything, because by it’s very definition, zero energy means that there is no energy there to split.
When you talk about quantum fluctuations, you are talking about “something” whereas I’m talking about “nothing”. — Present awareness
You made a number of points that some people may find rather weird, but I think you touch on some interesting ideas.... if I try to put the gist of what you said into my language. — Gary Enfield
The nature of consciousness and awareness has not been established by science, and yet we know that they exist in creatures like ourselves - so they are not fantasy. I have also given several examples where single celled creatures without a brain, and individual molecules within cells, can seemingly exhibit properties of logic and awareness.
It may well be that the factor which enables any consciousness can be applied at any level of existence, but with different levels of sophistication.
If so, then your point about interacting energy waves might be one way to explain it. Over time, there would be no reason why the crudest mechanism of interacting energy waves might become more sophisticated and evolve in a separate manner over time. It is one of many possible theories. However you need specific examples to give substance to your ideas if they are to be taken seriously. — Gary Enfield
However, I don't see the point in such a debate unless you want to try to prove the existence of God within interacting energy waves. — Gary Enfield
Is there one robust documented example of anything spiritual existing? — Tom Storm
Hi Present Awareness
quantum fluctuations split no energy into equal ammounts of positive and negative energy
— scientia de summis
One may not split zero into anything, because by it’s very definition, zero energy means that there is no energy there to split.
When you talk about quantum fluctuations, you are talking about “something” whereas I’m talking about “nothing”.
— Present awareness
I think there is potentially a good debate here, because various famous names including Steven Hawking, have offered the 'splitting of nothingness into matter and anti-matter' as a way to have spontaneous creation, (seemingly out of nothing), but in a way that preserves the balance of mathematical equations. They do this because they struggle, like everyone else, with matter of origin.
What I don't see, is how this relates to the subject here. If you wish to pursue it, can you either explain how it is relevant here, or set-up a new discussion thread? Thanks. — Gary Enfield
By implication, it took 3,200m years between the time that the first cell emerged and the first multi-celled creature came to exist. However - all the steps in that evolutionary process were cells — Gary Enfield
I also think pinning ourselves to the concept of an amino acid or nucleotide is presumptuous. They wouldn't have evolved from a solution containing only their basic building blocks, but rather in many increments. You might want to consider the existence of a partial amino acid or nucleotide, and that some may have evolved prior to cells, in protocells, and then in the complete cell. All the evolution doesn't have to happen within a single medium, in one fell swoop, and considering the process to be essentially determined by holistic function is fallacy unless some evolutionary principles exist that have not been discovered. We lack a record of the missing molecular links, but it hasn't been disproven that they existed, we just haven't found comparable combinations so far. — Enrique
This possible mechanism for abiogenesis has been proposed to Gary Enfield many times in this thread. He has no good response. He just goes on saying that, since we don't understand all the principles of how abiogenesis through self-organization actually works, that's proof that it's impossible. You're just beating your head against a wall. — T Clark
if someone chooses to place a different interpretation on the same facts, the facts haven't changed. — Gary Enfield
However, returning to your point, I am absolutely sure that no matter how long you left them, if you put all the elements that make up a living being in a container, they would probably never make a living entity. — Gary Enfield
I said that evolution was only possible when the mechanism got going - and the only known mechanism ever, is the living cell. — Gary Enfield
The universe is evolving, and as a consequence so are all of its component parts, not just the living parts. Even a rock evolves from magma, to rock, to minerals dissolved by water, a solution of mineralized water gets zapped by Stanley Miller to form amino acids, and then a cell shows us how certain amino acids can be combined to form animate matter as cellular proteins. Eventually elements of the rock may evolve to become a neuron, and contribute to a comment in this thread. :smile:
To limit evolution to animate matter suggests a predisposition to a dualistic understanding where life is something separate to the rest of the universe, rather then a monistic understanding of how elements of the universe evolve to life.
In my understanding what comes to life is an element of the universe, not something separate to it. Specifically what comes to life is an ordered pocket of the universe. Life could not arise in chaotic pockets, therefore life is caused by orderly pockets where water is liquid. In such situations atoms can self organize to form molecules, molecules can self organize to form amino acids, amino acids can self organize to form cellular proteins, cellular proteins can self organize to form cells, cells can self organize to form organs, and organs can self organize to form bodies. At each of these layers the interrelational evolution of the micro elements gives rise to a synergistic macro element that is an emergent property. This is roughly the complexity theory perspective. In this understanding, life arises out of, and depends on the order external to the system. — Pop
.As we see now water looks like a good structure to form life cells.
Though in the universe might be elements more stronger and better then water in forming life — Adughep
But the process of forming the "life cell" was not ordered at all. In my opinion the process was made using a lot of failed and chaotic results ( the results of thousands, millions or maybe more attempts) — Adughep
To compare the start of forming the "life cell" as the start when the Earth planet was born is also not so correct — Adughep
If i had to estimate the chances of forming a single "life cell" is something similar with "Rutherford's experiment" — Adughep
If you have a very small chance to form a "life cell", then the process can not be ordered.And i think this is true with every process that transforms or creates something new, very small chances = high disorder. — Adughep
Yes again, some of the essential amino acids were apparently formed under high pressure and temperature. What I was getting at is that the complex multilayered structure of life - atoms forming molecules, and molecules forming proteins, proteins forming cells, etc requires an ordered state. Such constructions cannot form in chaotic environments, because of their delicacy and complexity. So the first thing necessary for life is order and stability ( long period of order ). In a sense what life evolves out of is this order. — Pop
If it was "a long period of order" as you said, then most likely our evolution will progress much much faster. — Adughep
Dont you think that every process that requires a lot of time to finish(millions years) or has a small chance to even exist is because of the chaos and disorder around it ? — Adughep
The opposite could also be argued - That life existed so long is because of the order / stability of the environment.
I guess it depends on how much disorder we are talking about. The Dinosaurs obviously encountered too much, but other organisms were able to cope. — Pop
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