Prions are self-replicating proteins without DNA. One article talked about proteins mutating - I had not been aware that this language applies to non-living matter.
Sunlight? Plants need it, therefore animals need it ... the energy can be destructive but it is also converted to nutrients. Don't know why sunlight would kill the primordial goop. In fact, couldn't it promote mutations that would give some self-replicating molecules an edge over other self-replicating molecules?
I can't order any USP Primordial Goop, subject it to controlled levels of UV radiation and observe the results over a half-billion years. We do know there are some pretty old bones around, and some rocks that look like they were laid down in layers over a long period. It can't have been more than a few thousand years though, if we accept a priori that Genesis is a literal account of a six-day creation, followed by a lot of incest to begin the begetting.
Which we should do ... why?
….who cares when the big bang happened! Who cares how old the earth is! Who cares how it all came about! Who cares cares cares cares cares….(…who does)?
…what matters, is what’s up right now.
Right now…what’s up… is that you all somehow find it possible to argue that nothing about reality implicates intelligence…while at the very same time insisting that something (the laws of physics, the laws of nature, whatever-the-hell-you-want-to-call-them-it-?????) that could not be created WITHOUT intelligence (according to ANY conventional paradigm) is effectively instantiated in this very same reality.
That’s…what’s…up!
…and if we’re talking about ALL the laws of physics…whatever ‘intelligence’ it is that is involved easily gets elevated to the status of whatever a God is…by definition.
What is…actually, not funny…but just plain embarrassing…is watching you folks try and pluck the most non-existent of twigs to cling to in your vain attempts to mitigate this overwhelming conclusion.
…like…trying to locate somewhere (anywhere…anyhow) where the laws as we know them are not valid (which would so destroy any claim that the laws have universal application [not]).
…so far you’ve managed to come up with that which occurred before time (when / if - ever that even is) and occurs outside the known universe (where / if -ever that even is).
"But there is no evidence that 'laws' exist!"
…we derive these laws from our observations of reality, we confirm these laws by testing them against reality, and we confirm them further by predicting how reality will behave based on the application of the laws.
…but somehow some of you still manage to insist…that there is nothing about reality that remotely suggests that these laws somehow occur as a part of reality itself.
I think…’duh’ would be an insult to ‘duh’ in this situation.
And then there's this feebleness: The laws etc. that we come up with are just models.
….just!?!?!?!
Except they apply [for all intents and purposes], from here to eternity (a...metaphor)! Not to mention that there are probably something on the order of a couple of billion pieces of technology that are a direct [and…I might add…very successful] consequence of the application of these same laws (on a skeptic forum it should simply NOT be necessary to point this out!). Including every single piece of technology used in the exploration and application of science itself (think…LHC). At least some of you should have some comprehension of the range of skills and degree of precision involved...which are themselves a direct reflection of how robust and substantial are the laws and theories that are being utilized.
...so they're not 'just' anything!
"…but they’re just models…and don’t ya know we’ve got some way to go and there is obviously still much to be learned and studied."
Which means what…precisely. Oh yeah, another stupid strawman. Like…because we haven’t got everything figured out…then…then…then…what? They’re NOT valid?
…nope, they are. Just means that there’s still more to learn. What we have works. What we don’t have will work better.
I mean…are you actually expecting to come across some new law that will establish that all the laws we’ve so far come up with…don’t work?
So (with certain minimally reasonable qualifications)…everything we observe confirms the laws as we know them. Everything we predict confirms the laws as we know them. Everything we understand confirms the laws as we know them.
…the ONLY thing we don’t know…is where they freakin well come from…and why they work so damn well.
…but according to all of you…it’s all just some gigantic coincidence. Until we rub your noses in the facts that you yourselves never stop spouting.
Then we get truly classic cases of denial.
…it’s not a river in Egypt.
So…a reminder of the basic flaw in all your positions:
You all somehow find it possible to argue that nothing about reality implicates intelligence…while at the very same time insisting that something (the laws of physics, the laws of nature, whatever-the-hell-you-want-to-call-them-it-?????) that could not be created WITHOUT intelligence (according to ANY conventional paradigm) is effectively instantiated in this very same reality.
The simple unavoidable fact is…everything about reality implicates intelligence!
...and when it comes to intelligence on that kind of scale it useful to ponder the words of Wendell Barry.
"We cannot comprehend what comprehends us." ...sounds kind of like the words of a certain mathematician.
Lots of straw here, which I'd like to capture, before you make any other edits, annnnoid.
I'm reminded of an episode of The Big Bang Theory, the TV show. In it Sheldon and Amy have an argument over whose intellect is greater, a physicist's (laws of physics explain everything) or a neurobiologist's (model can capture/reproduce the physicist's thinking) (I'm paraphrasing, of course). It was great fun, but bad Philosophy, and not remotely science.
Yeah Jean Tate…that was one hell of a discussion. Everything relevant is unilaterally off-the-table or simply ignored (but don’t miss an opportunity to throw the same thing at anyone else)…but let’s make a real big issue out of a blatant strawman (aka: the finer points of what variety of cognitive activity is, or is not, an explicit expression of neural activity).