Lion IRC
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- Feb 5, 2016
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- Basic Beliefs
- Biblical theist
If RNA can be created without divine intervention, what need for the divine?
If it's creation that accounts for RNA that's enough for me.
If RNA can be created without divine intervention, what need for the divine?
humility just drips from his every word...
Sorry pal, your hubris is slipping.But these are the same atheists who say the only thing that would convince them God exists, is if...WAIT FOR IT....they experienced...
"something which couldnt be explained by the scientific method."
What does "creation" mean in that sentence?If RNA can be created without divine intervention, what need for the divine?
If it's creation that accounts for RNA that's enough for me.
It doesn’t seem to matter.What does "creation" mean in that sentence?If RNA can be created without divine intervention, what need for the divine?
If it's creation that accounts for RNA that's enough for me.
If RNA can be created without divine intervention, what need for the divine?
If it's creation that accounts for RNA that's enough for me.
All that aside, the origin of the first organism remains an unsolved problem
All that aside, the origin of the first organism remains an unsolved problem
Yes, and the two menu options as far as I can tell are;
- Time plus chance (infinite monkey theorem)
- Not chance
It's not. It can be, but it's not usually, much less always. This isn't hard to understand, if you think about it for a second; But...If it's creation that accounts for RNA
...apparently you are absolutely determined not to do so.that's enough for me.
Nah, that just sounds stupid and hidebound.humility just drips from his every word...
For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate me from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Yes, I suppose that does sound a bit arrogant doesnt it?
Ah yes, but that doesn’t rule out Thor.we don’t need Thor to explain thunder and lightning. Can you agree with that?
How does what the article says alter the fact of what happened?Maybe I'd better read the article to see if it actually does say "creation"..."create"..."created"
Good post bilby.But hardly as weird as a theist whining about atheists whining about it, when no atheist even mentioned it, despite theist prompting. And then using the topic nobody else mentioned as an "excuse" to introduce a blatant straw-man argument.It's a weird objection when atheists whine about God of the gaps.
The only thing that would convince a rational person of anything is evidence for that thing.But these are the same atheists who say the only thing that would convince them God exists, is if...WAIT FOR IT....they experienced...
"something which couldnt be explained by the scientific method."
If you want to convince me that God exists, just supply evidence that God exists.
If you believe that this requires "something which couldnt be explained by the scientific method", then you may be right - that would certainly be a requirement if God does not exist. But if God does exist, simply providing evidence of that existence would suffice.
Nobody cares that you are butt-hurt over being asked for actual support for your claims.
And the only person who said the text in quote marks is you - despite your dishonest use of those quote marks, to imply that you were addressing a man not made from straw.
A much-debated theory holds that 4 billion years ago, give or take, long before the appearance of dinosaurs or even bacteria, the primordial soup contained only the possibility of life. Then a molecule called RNA took a dramatic step into the future: It made a copy of itself.
Then the copy made a copy, and over the course of many millions of years, RNA begot DNA and proteins, all of which came together to form a cell, the smallest unit of life able to survive on its own.
Now, in an important advance supporting this RNA World theory, scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, Calif., have carried out a small but essential part of the story. In test tubes, they developed an RNA molecule that was able to make accurate copies of a different type of RNA.
The work, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, gets them closer to the grand goal of growing an RNA molecule that makes accurate copies of itself.
“Then it would be alive,” said Gerald Joyce, president of Salk and one of the authors of the new paper. “So, this is the road to how life can arise in a laboratory or, in principle, anywhere in the universe.”
How many who posted actually read the article? I feel for Tharmas who was trying to start a discussion about the article but it was derailed by a poster who created a lot of nonsensical posts Oh my. There's that word again.The team remains a ways off from showing that this is how life on Earth truly began, but the scenario they tested probably mimics one of the earliest stirrings of evolution, a concept described by the English naturalist Charles Darwin more than 150 years ago.
I think he fails to understand the difference between "assembled according to a plan" and "assembled by putting chemicals that exist in lifeless environments in a lifeless environment and shaking it in ways that produce 'predictably unpredictable' results".If RNA can be created without divine intervention, what need for the divine?
If it's creation that accounts for RNA that's enough for me.
So it’s OK that RNA was created by blind natural processes, which it was?
I think you’re equivocating on the meaning of the word “create” which, like all words, has different shades of meaning in different contexts. You seem to think that “create” means PURPOSEFUL creation; i.e., design. But it need not mean that at all. Evolution “creates” all manner of forms varied and wonderful, without an ounce of thought behind any of it.
Add it to the list.I think he fails to understand the difference between "assembled according to a plan" and "assembled by putting chemicals that exist in lifeless environments in a lifeless environment and shaking it in ways that produce 'predictably unpredictable' results".
Yeah, we don't know which horse will win the next Kentucky Derby, but we do know with fair certainty that the winning jockey won't be riding a duck.We don't know life's origins in the same way that we don't know the whole fossil record. We know, through inference, what happened, it's just hard to define the process in scientific terms. Personally, I'll take Dawkins' explanation in The Selfish Gene and call it a day.
Precisely. There are those of us unable to differentiate between an evidenced claim and an unevidenced claim. Enough said.God or no god, things go on the same.