Just curious, what is your warrant for claiming that we know this? It is obviously a belief; and given certain presuppositions, it is justified; but what makes you so confident that it is true? — aletheist
But who takes vitalism seriously anyway? — SophistiCat
[Scientists] aren't really producing life from scratch - there's rather too much hype about their results, impressive as they are. I suppose if someone did pull off such a feat - actually assembling a living organism from non-living components, as opposed to modifying and reassembling parts of living organisms - that would be a convincing argument against vitalism. — SophistiCat
Many of the familiar elements of which organisms are constituted (excepting hydrogen, which was present in the immediate aftermath of the Big Bang, along with much more limited amounts of other trace elements such as helium and lithium IIRC) are formed by nuclear fusion in the cores of stars (the all-important carbon atom, for instance, is produced by jamming together 3 helium nuclei in the "triple alpha" process). Only the heaviest atoms (which include, as you note, gold) are produced in supernovae.Life, as we would define it, didn't begin in this part of this galaxy until:
a) enough supernovae had produced enough of the heavier elements all the way up to gold and uranium — Bitter Crank
The fact that something occurred by "chance" doesn't entail that it lacked a cause or explanation: it may simply mean that there was no intentional plan or design underlying its occurrence. A fellow can have a "chance" meeting with the cute girl in his office at the coffee machine (in that the encounter was unplanned by either of them), or he may have memorized her schedule of comings and goings and made sure that he was at the coffee machine at the just the moment he knew she'd be there, so he could "just happen" to bump into her, in which case the encounter was not due to chance.I think it's interesting that the 'origin of life' is the one type of event for which the favoured scientific explanation is that it was a chance occurence. In all other matters, one expects a scientific hypothesis to provide a cause, or a reason, for what it seeks to explain. But not here. — Wayfarer
Isn't Venter involved in "minimal genome"-type research (i.e. investigating what is the minimum number of genes an organism requires in order to sustain and propagate itself)? That line of research would seem to be at least tangentially relevant to OOL.Why do you think Venter's work is relevant to the OOL research? — SophistiCat
Many of the familiar elements of which organisms are constituted (excepting hydrogen, which was present in the immediate aftermath of the Big Bang, along with much more limited amounts of other trace elements such as helium and lithium IIRC) are formed by nuclear fusion in the cores of stars (the all-important carbon atom, for instance, is produced by jamming together 3 helium nuclei in the "triple alpha" process). Only the heaviest atoms (which include, as you note, gold) are produced in supernovae. — Arkady
The answer, of course, is already contained in your question - the warrant is in the justification. — SophistiCat
The justification warrants the belief, but not (by itself) the claim to knowledge. — aletheist
Isn't Venter involved in "minimal genome"-type research (i.e. investigating what is the minimum number of genes an organism requires in order to sustain and propagate itself)? That line of research would seem to be at least tangentially relevant to OOL. — Arkady
What these observations do, is undermine the notion that 'life arose by chance'. There is an element of chance, but chance is only meaningful when there are various possibilities, and for there to be domain of possibility, something has to exist already. — Wayfarer
What else could possibly warrant a claim of knowledge? — SophistiCat
It's the overwhelming preponderance of evidence. — VagabondSpectre
The fact that something occurred by "chance" doesn't entail that it lacked a cause or explanation: it may simply mean that there was no intentional plan or design underlying its occurrence — Arkady
In the same way that the formation of a storm is determined by the laws of physics, hypothetically abiogenesis can also occur as an emergent phenomenon from basic laws. — VagabondSpectre
The particular, eternally persisting, elementary physical stuff of the world, according to the standard presentations of relativistic quantum field theories, consists (unsurprisingly) of relativistic quantum fields. And the fundamental laws of this theory take the form of rules concerning which arrangements of those fields are physically possible and which aren’t, and rules connecting the arrangements of those fields at later times to their arrangements at earlier times, and so on — and they have nothing whatsoever to say on the subject of where those fields came from, or of why the world should have consisted of the particular kinds of fields it does, or of why it should have consisted of fields at all, or of why there should have been a world in the first place. Period. Case closed. End of story. 1 — David Albert
But each of us has certain presuppositions that dictate what we count as evidence and how we evaluate it, and different people can have different presuppositions, such that what is reasonable to some is not to others. I see it as an important role of philosophy to expose those presuppositions so that we are not adopting them uncritically. What are you assuming when you claim to know that the Big Bang happened, which another individual could reasonably dispute? — aletheist
I think, ultimately, all such questions are undecidable, on the grounds given by Kant in his section on the 'antinomies of reason'. But I also think at the very least, the fine-tuning observations ought to give pause to the idea that seems so obvious in our day and age, that life arose by chance. — Wayfarer
If life comes from chance, I suppose that means its the result of probabilistic laws that are just there. The casino is just here, and it happened to generate creatures who could analyze the slots and call the casino a casino. — Ignignot
So the inescapable implication is always that mind is a product of mindlessness. That, I think, lies behind a lot of the angst of existential literature in the 20th C - the sense of 'thrown-ness', having been born out of chaos in a meaningless universe, and now being able to contemplate that. It seems the implication of the 'life as chance' attitude. — Wayfarer
...each of us has certain presuppositions that dictate what we count as evidence and how we evaluate it, and different people can have different presuppositions, such that what is reasonable to some is not to others. I see it as an important role of philosophy to expose those presuppositions so that we are not adopting them uncritically. — aletheist
I do not see how anyone can possibly know that the universe is 13.75 billion years old.... — aletheist
What are you assuming when you claim to know that the Big Bang happened, which another individual could reasonably dispute? — aletheist
But does this impurity really reduce its value? Is pure reason something like an impossible object of desire, like a perfect circle never to be found among actual circles? — Ignignot
C S Lewis illustrates the argument from reason through the two different senses of the word "because". In the first sense 'because' can be used to mean a cause and effect relationship ("Grandfather is ill today because he ate lobster yesterday"). In the second sense 'because' is used in a Ground and Consequent relation, for example, "Grandfather must be ill today because he hasn’t got up yet (and we know he is an invariably early riser when he is well").
The first sense indicates a causal relation, while the second is a logical relation between beliefs that involves an act of knowing or seeing or rational insight. The second is nearer to a deductive proposition.
Another example of the second sense of because is the mathematical reasoning if A=B and B=C then A=C.
Lewis then explains that every event in nature, including our very thoughts, must be of the first type if physicalism is true. If this is the case, then when we ask "Why do you think this?", the actual answer must always begin with a Cause-Effect style 'because' - i.e. we think so and so, because our neuronal patterns are configured thus.
As a result, all of the thoughts that go into answering the question lie in a causal relation to one another - including the final answer. But we know that 'to be caused' is not the same as 'to proved' - and so the physicalist, if he is consistent, must admit he has no way to know whether what he thinks is true. He has no way to bridge the gap between the two distinct senses of 'because'. This is why the materialist position is self-refuting.
“But then with me the horrid doubt always arises whether the convictions of man's mind, which has been developed from the mind of the lower animals, are of any value or at all trustworthy. Would any one trust in the convictions of a monkey's mind, if there are any convictions in such a mind?
I don't think we have any choice. We employ reason to doubt the perfection of reason. Reason is who we are when we're not just meat. We're embodied language that weaves an origin story for itself, but we never seem to be done editing our stories and therefore our own identity, which is a sort of story.Likewise, if reason is simply an evolved adaption, then why should we trust it? — Wayfarer
But why are his arguments immune from that criticism, whilst every one else's are not? — Wayfarer
We're still biological beings, but that is not all were are - so the attempt to describe or anticipate all our potentialities or capacities in purely biological terms, is reductionist. — Wayfarer
Lewis then explains that every event in nature, including our very thoughts, must be of the first type if physicalism is true. If this is the case, then when we ask "Why do you think this?", the actual answer must always begin with a Cause-Effect style 'because' - i.e. we think so and so, because our neuronal patterns are configured thus — Ignignot
How do we distinguish justified belief from genuine knowledge? — aletheist
The fact that something occurred by "chance" doesn't entail that it lacked a cause or explanation: it may simply mean that there was no intentional plan or design underlying its occurrence. — Arkady
I confess to some confusion on this point: you claimed that science rejects "chance" explanations in every domain except the origin of life. I pointed out that "chance" simply means "without intentional plan or design," and you agree to that definition.That's precisely what it means in this context. — Wayfarer
The fact that something occurred by "chance" doesn't entail that it lacked a cause or explanation: it may simply mean that there was no intentional plan or design underlying its occurrence — Arkady
This [ i.e. existence of natural laws] seems to me to be an observation as much as an assumption, wouldn't you say? — Arkady
We know the big bang happened (but we don't know exactly what it was)... — VagabondSpectre
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