To clarify myself:
Alright, realize I'm discussing relating Evoultion to the generation ( or creation of ) life. Let's define the creation of life by utilizing the simple parts ( amino acids, protiens, etc.. ) in their most base form to witness the spontanious generation ( if you will ) of living organisms ( such as bacteria ) without using those that exist in their present form ( DNA/RNA ) or pre-made templates ( such as man-made life ).
That said, we CAN utilize processes to cause reproduction of life, but that IS NOT creation of life. Using spheres of bilipids and injecting DNA & protiens we are not generating life, but rather stimulating reproductive sequences. Perhaps if I put it into a math equation, you could better see my point:
This is what we cannot show:
(Environment) + (Non-living Elements) = Spontanious Generation
(Spontanious Generation) = (Creation of Life)
This is what we can show:
(Environment) + (Non-living Elements) + (Pre-existing Life ie-> Humans) = (Reproductive Squence)
(Reproductive Sequence) = (Continuation of Life)
That's more my point more than anything. Although we CAN produce a reproductive sequence of sorts ( the lipid sphere), we are not creating a life system or a new life. The reason is that life already exists. I'll elaborate further:
In a given system inside the rainforest there are creatures and plants which rely on each other to survive. Now, within that system we couldn't create the rainforest because it's already there. There's no suitable area for it to exist and the envrionment itself isn't suited for the generation of a rainforest. It's more there to stimulate it's continual growth. Now, say, we destroy all of the rainforest in that area & it's surroundings, we then could create a new rainforest after 10 or 15 years or so because the environment would now be suitable to have a rainforest be there.
Relating this back to the spontanious generation of life: There's no way to spontaniously generate life unless life in that system is destroyed. Unfortunately, that means we couldn't possibly intervene or the experiment would be different. It's now: "Can humans create life", NOT "can nature spontaniously generate life." Because of that fact, we're no longer discussing the argument with Evolution's claim.
So let's say, then, for us to spontaniously generate life, we'd have to remove life and not intervene. So, basically, in order to create life we'd have to watch life occur before our very eyes.
Here's another li'l question I thought of:
Is evolution effected by entropy?
I think so
Also, a computer is not able to react to it's environment really. If you place a computer in a cold room, it doesn't react to the cold -- it keeps doing what it was doing before without thought processes. Also, computers do not natively posess the ability to distinguish any of that -- it has to be taught how.