Originally posted by: apoppin
Why are they both silly? Again, I do not understand the equivalence. So what if abiogenesis is extremely unlikely? The anthropic principle states that of course the only place we would even be around to argue about how likely it is, is the one where it happened. Considering the billions of stars in billions of galaxies out there, it's not unlikely at all.
What is strange to me is that people think a sky beardo is somehow more likely or even in the same ballpark as likely.
To *me* they are equally silly
the very idea that a giant "soup" needs to be brewed by chance in a precise sequence .. to produce a single precursor to an enzyme - and Scientists think they are witnessing a Cosmic Event when they try to replicate it with every favorable conditon that can be conceived of .. yet no life and nothing resembling ANYTHING that might reasonably become "life" .. that the most "simple" of life is far beyond our current Science to even reverse Engineer it
the sky-beardo would be Energy and not necessarily "intelligent"
both are just as [un] "likely" to me
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This is not making sense to me. Mass and energy are interchangeable, so why would 'energy' always existing be any different then mass always existing? Not only that, but why would the existence of some pile of energy solve the problem of the rise of life?
As far as science being unable to reproduce it, so what? That's the thing, we don't even know what 'favorable' conditions are. Scientists have been able to create conditions in which amino acids and other building blocks of life formed out of inorganic.. whatever though. Certainly an important start.
The whole thing is that we are certainly here right now, and so we must have gotten here somehow. Out of all of the possible explanations, one grounded in a form of abiogenesis is the most likely. Sure our understanding of it sucks, but it's light years better then thinking we were poofed into existence.
