Originally posted by shima
>>No, its an argument from INDUCTION. If there is no natural mechanism to evolve a cell from non-living chemicals, then we can inductively assume that cell was created by something that wasn't a natural mechanism.<<
The problem is in proving that there is no natural mechanism possible. Since it is not possible to prove a negative, you are going to have a hard time proving that.
No, the problem is proving that there IS a possible natural mechanism. The cell is irreducibly complex. You cannot break it down into some pre-cell form. The only way it could have appeared is fully-formed. There is no such thing as a natural process that makes fully-formed cells pop into existence out of biotic chemicals.
>>Actually, a theistic scenario *IS* an explanation. <<
True, but it raises MORE questions than it awnsers.
No, there are answers for all the questions it raises, you just refuse to accept those answers.
>>There is no good reason to think that we *wouldn't* have already discovered the origin of cells at this point in time. Biochemists and microbiologists have been studying biotic chemcials and compounds for decades. <<
We have been studying the stars for millions of years, but only since the invention of the telescope have we made some serious progress.
We have also studied the sun for 10,000 years, but only since the invention of the spectrograph have we made some serious headway into understanding its inner processes.
Okay, and what does that have to do with the origin of cells? We have had microscopes, laboratories, and all the resources necessary for the study of biochemistry/cellular biology for many decades, and all we have discovered is how much more complex, and irrudicibly sophisticated cells are than what we first thought. Our increase in knowledge in these fields has been gradually UNDERMINING the possiblity of a natural explanation for the origin of cells....not supporting it.
>>They have all the high tech equipment and resources they would ever need to reproduce the evolution of a cell in the laboratory, yet, they cannot do so. So why in the blue blazes should we expect that some random, mindless "natural process" can accomplish what intelligent scientists in laboratories - cannot?<<
Because:
1) The process is most likely to be complicated
What process? Do you mean the process that doesn't exist?
2) Our understanding of the quantummechanical properties of large molecules such as DNA is incomplete
That lack of understanding has nothing to do with the evolution of cells, and why that evolution has never been re-created in a laboratory, even when given all the same resources and conditions that would have existed on the primortial earth....and intelligent scientists manipulating the process to boot!!
3) Natural processes have all the time in the world
That matters little if the specific natural process you speak of doesn't exist, or is powerless to create a cell. I can shake a bag full of computer parts around for trillions of years, but I will never have assembled a working computer by shaking the bag if the act of "shaking a bag" is an *insufficient mechanism* for assembling a computer. You can spend trillions of years beaming energy at a rock, but it will never turn it into a slug if "beaming energy" is an insufficient mechanism for creating a slug.
4) Perhaps we haven't invented the "bio-telescope" yet
Since I don't even know what that is, and it doesn't exist, I guess I can respond by simply saying - "perhaps we haven't invented the 'god-telescope' yet"???
:bannana:
5) There already exists life here. It is undoubtedly better at surviving than any NEW life form we build. The new lifeform wouldn't be able to compete against it.
We are not talking about "inventing" a new lifeform. We are talking about re-creating a lifeform that already exist on this planet.
By the way....you left out a viable option from your list....
6) There is no such thing as a natural process that can create cells from biotic chemcials.
Yes, I agree completely!!!