I fully accept evolution as absolute fact with one aggravation that has bothered me for 23 years. what bothers me isn't that there isn't an answer but that every educator I have ever met has to LIE about it. There is simply no plausible mechanism for the initial formation of the first life. I’ll round up and say 4 billion years for the first life on earth. Now I don’t disagree that at some point hydrophobic lipids could of made a ring and a speck of dust could of got in there blah,blah,blah, I know you know the rest.
Specifically what lie is it that they tell in your experience.
My educators simply said that we don't know how the initial spark of life happened but that there are some interesting theories that might account for part of that story.
Would you class that as a lie? I certainly don't
The common story of the pieces coming together bit by bit over billions of years simply does NOT stand up to skepticism.
It does not stand up to confirmed observation either.
1) Confirmed observation of numerous sources of radiometric dating all converging on the solar system having formed 4.5 Billion years ago
PLus 2) The confirmed observation of stromatolites in rock show that early life was present 3.5 billion years ago.
http://jrscience.wcp.muohio.edu/fieldcourses06/PapersMarineEcologyArticles/Stromatolites.html
Take into account that the early solar system was hostile to life and we have in fact just around 300 million years not billions of years available for this to happen.
Science is supposed to follow the scientific method and therefore be testable and repeatable.
The word you're looking for is falsifiable. There's lots of science that isn't repeatable in the lab. Take for example astrophysics. We don't have stars in the lab. We have computer models but not actual stars. We can predict that stars of a certain size will have certain lifespans but waiting the hundreds of millions of years to verify this directly is not practical. We want results a little sooner than that. However the theories of stellar evolution do make falsifiable predictions that can be tested. For example it has been predicted that no white dwarf will be found that exceeds 1.4 solar masses. Since that prediction has been made many white dwarves have been discovered each of which could have falsified the theory. None have. So the theory stands.
In the case of abiogensis we have the directly testable assumption that abiotic processes can create organic monomers. This was tested in 1953 by Harold Miller and Stanley Urey. The formation of the amino acids lead to some interesting results. Mainly that some amino acids form in preference to others when formed abiotically. These then would have been the building blocks available to make early proteins. Hidden in the genetic code of life are records of some of the earliest processes shared by all life. These seem to confirm that the earliest process to evolve, those shared by all life forms (e.g. the codon coding system) share this preference for the same amino acids predicted to have been more prevalent in this model of a primordial soup.
So let’s start with a single cell that is alive. If we kill that cell evolution states that given enough time that cell will eventually evolve alive again because all the pieces have already come together, no primordial soup needed.
I'm sorry I don't follow you. I don't think evolution states any such thing. This appears to be a theory of straw constructed for the purpose of being weak and easy to ridicule. I'm sure that;'s not of your doing but whoever you picked it up from is not a competent biologist. In fact it isn't even a theory of evolution it's a theory of abiogeneisis. You'll have heard all about the difference.
Let me simply restate that the theory of evolution is not dependent on any particular theory of abiogenesis being true. If God created the first spark of life evolution is still provably true.
Obviously an event of this kind had to of taken place to bring the non-living alive. There has to be a repeatable testable mechanism for this occurrence. This could never be tested, of course, so we have to take it on faith, which is not science.
This appeal to incredulity does nothing to counter the observations made by many scientists testing many aspects of viable abiogenesis theories.
http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2011/07/we_can_know_nothing_about_the.php
We also have the observations that conditions in the early universe were unsuitable for the existence of carbon based life, and that carbon based life exists now. That a transition occurred from one state to the other is not an article of faith, it is an observation. Now it may be that this transition required divine intervention, the infinite regress of intelligent assistance or a sequence of events of such staggering improbability that they could only have occurred in an infinite universe. Nonetheless it happened as sure as I sit here.
More likely however is that a sequence of more probable events explains the transitions as an accumulation of gradual and stable increments towards recognisable life.
May I recommend my own little attempt at such a narrative.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6232883&postcount=265
Here is a scientific test of the initial formation of the first life form that CAN be done:
In a self-contained, sterile but life supporting medium, place a freshly killed cell and wait 4 billion years. Unfortunately that is nothing but a thought experiment. To convert this thought experiment to an actual one we have to convert the 4 billion years to 4 billion instances so that we would only have to wait a year. So if we did this experiment with 4 billion cells and waited 1 year do you honestly think one of those cells would come to life?
I have no idea. Nor do you. Are you inputting any energy into the system? You certainly have done little to accurately model the conditions in the early oceans.
Notes
1) You'd need 300 million years not 4 billion in order to match observations.
2) This would only speak to the probability of these abiotic chemicals self assembling in one spontaneous step and then in the unfavourable conditions that there was only just exactly enough of each constituent as for the assembly to be possible.
Lets say that we ran the experiment and found that you required 300 billion of these pre-cells, before one of them self assembled with the one year timeframe. Would that tell you that to have that happen in a mere 300 million years there should be expected to be 1,000 habitable planets were it took longer? Or if the cell failed to form as your hunch suggests would that simply mean that your model of abiogenesis is primitive and unrepresentative of any natural process that we expect to have feasibly happened and that another model is required.
It would appear that your fellow scientists concur as they do have other models which do not require such a single step.
I have no vested interest and simply do not care what mechanism exists whether it be just browning motion, a Frankenstein force, a higgs life on particle, whatever, but it is a fact that there is nothing in science to explain how this could have ever happen yet day after day in science book after science book they pretend that it does and this is simply wrong.
Please quote a science book that you feel is in error on this.
Darwin wasn't sure whether all life was descended from a single common ancestor and left room for the divine.
There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.
Evolution is real undeniable force but it can only happen after life has started. Evolution does not explain how life started because evolution requires natural/sexual selection which can only happen after there is a self-replicating cycle. Evolution is only half the story and to miss label evolution and use the process to explain what it doesn’t is simply wrong and I believe it qualifies as it’s own pseudoscience. I understand the need to shut up the creationists and the intelligent design folks, but to just say evolution does what it simply can't just plain wrong and I really want someone with an intelligent skeptical mind to acknowledge this.
Who thinks life will "just happen" given enough time/instances?
You are absolutely correct except in one aspect. The theory of evolution doesn't claim to explain the initial origins of life. (Though the principles of natural selection may apply to early replicating pre-biotic chemistry) The skeptical and scientific mind already acknowledges this.
It is a mischaracterisation to claim that it does and if indeed that is what is being taught then that is wrong. However I've yet to see evidence that this is the case.