Into the Night
Verified User
The universe is stuff. Life is just as much a possibility as black holes. No difference. The organic/inorganic distinction is arbitrary.
Having trouble defining what 'life' means?
The universe is stuff. Life is just as much a possibility as black holes. No difference. The organic/inorganic distinction is arbitrary.
Having trouble defining what 'life' means?
The automobile maker can only exist inside of the automobile lol?
You get two people to describe what 'red' means, and you will get a disagreement. This is true among scientists as well. The reason? 'Red' is a subjective term.There are a lot of people smarter than you or me who would disagree with that.
Correct. The Theory of Abiogenesis is a nonscientific theory. It is not falsifiable. We can't go back to see what actually happened.The idea that life is emergent from non-life is little different from a religious dogma at this point.
By definition.Biological life is impossible separate from biological information. That is a fact, actually.
So it is the same question. How did life arrive on Earth? Did it originate here, or was it brought here by some kind of intelligence?Fundamentally, the origin of life is a problem of the origin of biological information.
Some in the scientific community think that life may have originated much more than one time. The early planet was bombarded and there was constant destruction - life could have originated dozens or hundreds of times.
It doesn't have to be some magical, mystical thing. We can't recreate it because the lengths of time for such experimentation are prohibitive, but all life really requires is the ability to replicate.
No. Actually the idea that life and non-life are absolutely distinct is not widely believed in physics.
If life can exist then it was possible at the big bang. The universe itself is evolving.
Oddly enough, physics simply doesn't go there. It doesn't try to define 'life'.
What information problem? The complexity of information developing just right?
I believe is referring not to the RNA or the DNA that is in every cell, but the code the RNA or DNA form. The sequencing of these chemical strands forms a code, much like the binary codes in a computer. As far as anyone can determine, a sequence of three molecules is enough to form a 'bit' in this code. Thus, this 'bit' can store more than the values of 0 or 1. Snippets of this code are used to form various proteins and other molecules for the cell.
Do you think it's possible that robots with AI could ever be "alive"?
What’s the point in making a robot that needs to eat and poop?
What’s the point in making a robot that needs to eat and poop?
How does one believe in abiogenesis?
How can something with no boundaries evolve?
You either believe it or you don’t.
I don’t. Let the theological chips fall where they may.
You get two people to describe what 'red' means, and you will get a disagreement. This is true among scientists as well. The reason? 'Red' is a subjective term.
Correct. The Theory of Abiogenesis is a nonscientific theory. It is not falsifiable. We can't go back to see what actually happened.
That theory remains the circular argument it started as. It has extending arguments from it. It is a religion. That really is the best definition of what 'religion' means.
By definition.
So it is the same question. How did life arrive on Earth? Did it originate here, or was it brought here by some kind of intelligence?
As far as the universe goes, nothing requires life to have any beginning at all. it simply is...like the universe itself. It may have always existed, and always will, just like the universe itself may have no beginning at all, and no end. This is the Theory of the Continuum. I believe it makes more sense than the Theory of the Big Bang.
Okay what do you think abiogenesis means?
The hypothesis that life arose from non-living chemical precursors.
I suggest reading about the Infinite Monkey Theorem to begin with.