Re: Cambrian Explosion

From: Richard McGough (richard@biblewheel.com)
Date: Wed Jul 30 2003 - 11:57:33 EDT

  • Next message: Richard McGough: "RE: The Aphenomenon of Abiogenesis"

    >Richard McGough wrote:
    >>
    >> Re post: http://www.calvin.edu/archive/asa/200307/0609.html
    >>
    >> George wrote:
    >>
    >> >
    >> > The "phenomenon that Science can't explain" is the emergence of terrestrial life
    >> >between ~ 3 & 4 billion years ago.
    >> >
    >>
    >> I'm sorry to belabour the point, but my argument has nothing to do with the universally recognized fact that life had a beginning on earth.
    >>
    >> My point is that there is no evidence for abiogenesis, which I take to be defined as "the emergence of life from non-living matter through natural processes."
    >
    > & by the same token there is no evidence for the emergence of life via miracle -
    >i.e., by the immediate action of God. The argument cuts both ways. I completely agree
    >that we do not yet have a satisfactory scientific explanation of abiogenesis. You are
    >trying to get me to agree to more than that - to say that therefore life didn't happen
    >through natural processes and was miraculous. That simply doesn't follow.
    >
    >George L. Murphy
    >gmurphy@raex.com
    >http://web.raex.com/~gmurphy/
    >
    >

    Hi George, good to have you back. I was wondering what you would have to say on this issue.

    Yes, the argument cuts both ways. That's what I love about logic - its very predictable :)

    I agree completely that the lack of evidence of the phenomenon of abiogenesis is not in and of itself evidence *for* a miraculous origin of life. That's why I never asserted any such thing. That was never my point.

    I wasn't trying to get you to agree to anything more than the fact that abiogenesis is not a scientific observation. Though I believe life began through a divine form-confering act, I never asserted that anywhere in the course of this thread. If you review all my posts, I'm sure you will agree.

    I think it is worth noting how difficult it seems for people to separate assertions about scientific *observations* from assertions about scientific *explanations*. My primary point concerning abiogenesis has never been that science can not explain how it happened. My point has consistently been the assertion that we don't even know if abiogenesis (through natural processes) ever even occurred. The tenacity of this confusion is evident by the fact that you, Howard, Jim, Glen, and others have all reframed my argument in terms of the explanatory powers of science. My point has never been about what science can *explain*. My point is about what science has *observed*, either directly or indirectly. Of course, this argument is discussed at length in the Aphenomenon of Abiogenesis thread which split off this thread.

    Finally, it is important to remember the reason for this - it all began when Glen asserted that Denyse was being "highly inconsistent" by admitting the natural "evolution" of elements while denying the natural "evolution" of life. Do you agree that it is incorrect to use "evolution" in these two very different senses in a single sentence? It seems like an amphiboly to me.

    I understand you were gone during most of this conversation. Perhaps you missed some of the points I reiterated above.

    So how was the ASA meeting? Solve any fundamental questions? Hehehe :-)

    Richard Amiel McGough
    Discover the sevenfold symmetric perfection of the Holy Bible at http://www.BibleWheel.com



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