Into the Night
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Why does God need to be created then?
He doesn't.
Why does God need to be created then?
Quote Originally Posted by Taichiliberal View Post
Seems to me that there is one major difference between the creationist and the atheistic scientists:
- they both have faith in their respective beliefs.
- the DIFFERENCE is that the scientist have faith in the scientific method to eventually explain it all. The creationist have faith that eventually God will appear to validate what is already "explained".
Maybe they should have a conference call and compare notes. Who knows, they may figure something out all can agree with.
My two cents is that theology and science are asking fundamentally different questions.
The creationist attempt to read literal historical significance and scientific principles into the Torah is a pathetic attempt by fringe Christians to fight a last stand against the forces of modernity.
World religions, at their best, are asking questions about how to cultivate virtue, how to live a meaningful life, and how to reconcile human existence with the nature of evil and suffering in the world.
Those are the right questions to be asking -- but that intellectual tradition never going to provide insight into a grand unified theory of physics or the mysteries of abiogenesis.

The Theory of Abiogenesis states that life originated on Earth through a series of random unspecified events.
It has to start somewhere. Unless you think life has always been there.
The fundamental forces so far discovered have no boundaries. They operate everywhere in the universe, as far as we've observed.The fundamental forces. Boundaries.
No. I don't conclude anything.When you find a smooth round pebble in the woods, do you conclude that it's manmade?
Why not: life has always existed in a universe that has likewise always existed.
The way it is measured or observed.
Eternal existence is an attribute of the Judeo Christian God. Eternal existence also contradicts evolution since the concept of change over time implicates a beginning or starting point: organisms evolved from simple to complex over geological time.
So you think life has always existed?
Proof is for mathematics.
Evidence is for science.
Agreed on supporting the ideology that the Universe is unlimited in many ways. Some people want to oversimplify it to either/or, but that's not a true picture.I have never been the type of person to think that just because we do not understand something now, means it is permanently beyond our comprehension.
On the other hand, I have the intellectual integrity to consider the possibility that the organization of complex, self-replicating cells from an inert pre-biotic soup may have been the result of an infinitesimally improbable series of chemical and physical reactions, rendering the possibility of life elsewhere in the galaxy remote.
I devoted an entire thread to those, and other insights:
https://www.justplainpolitics.com/showthread.php?162896-Origin-of-Life&p=4273023#post4273023
Open systems.
Why not?
I'll repeat the question since you didn't answer:
Say a cell DOES somehow get created by some random unspecified events.
What does it eat? How does it gain sufficient energy to divide?
But not randomly arranged chemicals or arranged out of necessity according to physical laws—like ice crystals.
Nobody claimed that they're "randomly arranged". Natural selection is not random. Sure there's a few random mutations here and there.
But only conflicting evidence. Science does not use supporting evidence. Only religions do that.
You skipped a step or two lol.
Natural selection needs something to select *from* before it can do anything interesting. One of the [several] problems with abiogenesis is it lacks a mechanism. No mechanism, no theory. It’s a big part of the reason abiogenesis is a hypothesis.
Darwin’s contribution was that he provided a mechanism to explain the phenomena. I think the explanatory power of NS is over rated when it comes to Darwin’s broader claims [not allowed to use the term macro evolution lol] but NS wasn’t even around when there was no life.
The origin of life is inexplicable.
The same answer: open systems.
They get energy from outside agencies.