Now you are being stupid. No paradox. RQAA.
Denial of creation of said paradox. Denial of self argument.
Now you are being stupid. No paradox. RQAA.
Word stuffing.
I accept your belated confession you were ass-backwards wrong that we supposedly cannot observe past events.I am aware of it. Theories can come from anywhere, such as looking at the stars or even from watching an episode of Sponge Bob. Yes, that includes theories of science.
Never said any such thing. Word stuffing.I accept your belated confession you were ass-backwards wrong that we supposedly cannot observe past events.
Observing the 'afterglow' of the Big Bang???????!? That's an assignment, dude! Not an observation!Four generations of astronomers have observed quasars, galaxies, supernovae, even the afterglow of the Big Bang which are hundreds of millions to billions of years old.
I accept your belated confession you were ass-backwards wrong that we supposedly cannot observe past events.
Four generations of astronomers have observed quasars, galaxies, supernovae, even the afterglow of the Big Bang which are hundreds of millions to billions of years old.
Are you saying that random events are uncaused?
oh, you mean something has to cause it......I understand.....Something has to move to make it random.
oh, you mean something has to cause it......I understand.....
Things are always in motion. You rolling a dice with your hand is what caused the roll.
exactly......so the fact the dice are rolling is not random.....
Observing the 'afterglow' of the Big Bang???????!? That's an assignment, dude! Not an observation!
Correct. And yet the numbers are random.
Same with lottery machine. You cannot predict the next lottery numbers.
Virtual particles seem to reach the philosophical threshold of uncaused.I mean things are always in motion. Unexpected events happen all the time.
The only thing that are supposedly uncaused are virtual particles and radioactivity.
I see your confusion......the 6 and the 1 are not an event.......they are the observed results........the event is caused.........
you see creation......that is a result.....you still need a cause, unless its a random event......there is no third option.....
Virtual particles seem to reach the philosophical threshold of uncaused.
Strictly speaking, it seems to me the weak nuclear force causes radioactivity -- and while we cannot predict when any one single individual neutron will decay we can predict with statistical certainty the rate of decay of a population of neutrons.
Consider the smooth pebbles you find in a creek. Did they happen randomly? Or through motion and natural laws? Do you think intelligence is necessary to explain the existence of such smooth pebbles?
again you speak of the results, the smoothness......that is caused by the water rushing past them.......eventually you must deal with the question of the cause of the rock, the cause of the water, the cause of the downhill grade that resulted in the movement.......ultimately you must deal with the cause of the natural laws.....
the problem you cannot overcome is this......if the natural laws are your "cause", then they must have come into existence at the moment of the event (the event being "origin" of our universe, labeled The Big Bang) because if they are the cause and they had existed a millenia prior they would have been the trigger a millenia prior......
One more time, the origin is not necessary for the theory of evolution.
if it wasn't Mason I would say he's just a normal guy bitch slapping the idiots with reality.....but Mason isn't normal......
It's not apples and oranges. Creating amino acids, peptides, and RNA precursors is directly relevant to abiogenesis research
Origin of life and the abiogenesis hypothesis has been a legitimate field of scientific research for 80 years..
It took decades of research and tests to confirm black holes, the Higgs boson, and electromagnetism.
You seem to be under the impression that if one single test cannot once and for all time show a cell grow in situ from inert chemicals in a test tube, then the science is not testable.
Failed tests are part and parcel of the scientific method. It's called the null hypothesis, and they are just as important as tests that reject the null hypothesis.
It might be the case that someday we will have to accept the null hypothesis and conclude that we cannot grow in situ cells in a test tube from inert prebiotic material. In that case, we will have to completely rethink the abiogenesis hypothesis.
But the fact that current origin of life research is providing fruitful results on peptides and RNA suggests we are on the right track.