Originally posted by divegeesterCreating life in the lab would prove you don't need a deity to make life. That in turn would mean the possibility of life elsewhere in the solar system and the universe goes up exponentially.
If they succeed in creating life do you think that will support or detract from the concept of creation?
We THINK life will show up anywhere there is a halfway decent environment for life to develop, like early Mars or maybe the deep oceans of Europa or Titan.
The main question I would love to see answered, if we find such life, say on Titan, even microbes, is it based on our form of DNA? Every life form we have found on Earth has the same fundamental structure, our twisted ladder line of DNA.
Maybe other independently evolved life could have totally different structures such as a triangular ladder line or a cubical ladder line or something totally different. And what molecules it would use for energy and would it use photosynthesis and so forth, the kind of reproductive process it uses, sexual, non-sexual, etc..
Originally posted by sonhouseWhat? You actually think the current likelihood of life elsewhere in the universe is contained by the possibility that deities are required to make life? That's nonsense.
Creating life in the lab would prove you don't need a deity to make life. That in turn would mean the possibility of life elsewhere in the solar system and the universe goes up exponentially.
Every life form we have found on Earth has the same fundamental structure, our twisted ladder line of DNA.
Mostly because that's all we ever look for. If there are other life forms that are not multicellular and not particularly prolific, we probably wont notice them.
Originally posted by twhiteheadI think you meant 'constrained by the the possibility' etc. I was just taking devils advocate on the side of creationists. I think no such thing. I think life formed with no help needed by a deity and that life is in profusion in the rest of the universe.
What? You actually think the current likelihood of life elsewhere in the universe is contained by the possibility that deities are required to make life? That's nonsense.
[b]Every life form we have found on Earth has the same fundamental structure, our twisted ladder line of DNA.
Mostly because that's all we ever look for. If there are other life forms that are not multicellular and not particularly prolific, we probably wont notice them.[/b]
To think we are the only life form in the universe is ludicrous considering even in our own galaxy there are literally hundreds of billions of stars and even if life was only found on one in a million planets, that would still be like having life show up on one in one hundred thousand stars since most stars have multiple planets that exercise puts life on one million planets in our galaxy alone.
And even if the rules say you can only have one living planet in an entire galaxy, that also means, since there are also hundreds of billions of galaxies, at that rate only, there would be also hundreds of billions of planets with life forms on them of one sort or another scattered about in our universe.
Well we haven't found anything but twisted ladder logic DNA so far, obviously doesn't prove something else exists even here on Earth but the evidence gets smaller for such life forms with each passing decade.
Originally posted by sonhouseThis is no different from the discovery of DNA. It just gives an idea of how God might have done it. It in no way show that life could have formed on its own without intelligent imput from God.
http://phys.org/news/2015-03-nasa-ames-blocks-life-laboratory.html
This goes way beyond the Miller-Urey experiments.
Originally posted by RJHindsI would really love to see the look on your face as you rub off the egg when they put it all together and make life from chemicals.
This is no different from the discovery of DNA. It just gives an idea of how God might have done it. It in no way show that life could have formed on its own without intelligent imput from God.
Of course at that point you would just move the goalposts and say, "See, I TOLD YOU SO, it takes intelligence to create life".
Originally posted by sonhouseThey did not create life in the lab, so forget about it. 😏
Creating life in the lab would prove you don't need a deity to make life. That in turn would mean the possibility of life elsewhere in the solar system and the universe goes up exponentially.
We THINK life will show up anywhere there is a halfway decent environment for life to develop, like early Mars or maybe the deep oceans of Europa or Titan.
The ...[text shortened]... photosynthesis and so forth, the kind of reproductive process it uses, sexual, non-sexual, etc..
Originally posted by sonhouseIt is just more proof that man was created in the image of God just like the Holy Bible records. Among the animal kingdom there is not one that shows the creative ability that even approaches that of man. 😏
I would really love to see the look on your face as you rub off the egg when they put it all together and make life from chemicals.
Of course at that point you would just move the goalposts and say, "See, I TOLD YOU SO, it takes intelligence to create life".
Originally posted by sonhouseHold on a minute, does it? The molecules are meant to be formed in space. So they haven't produced evidence that they can be formed on Earth. This means that the molecules have to get to Earth in large amounts without being destroyed. Since this implies a collision to me, the likelihood is that any such molecule would be destroyed during the collision. So the theists can argue that it is in fact evidence for the necessity of God to protect the molecules.
Creating life in the lab would prove you don't need a deity to make life. That in turn would mean the possibility of life elsewhere in the solar system and the universe goes up exponentially.
We THINK life will show up anywhere there is a halfway decent environment for life to develop, like early Mars or maybe the deep oceans of Europa or Titan.
The ...[text shortened]... photosynthesis and so forth, the kind of reproductive process it uses, sexual, non-sexual, etc..
Sorry to spoil the party, but I'm always unimpressed by these "life started in space" arguments as the process of getting it here has a high chance of killing it. From the article the process depends on ultra-violet, so I don't see any strong reason why it shouldn't work on an early Earth since there won't have been an oxone layer then - that depends on photosynthesis. If their discovery could be replicated in a plausible early Earth environment I think it would weaken the theistic necessity claim, but otherwise I don't think that it does.