Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
So you look in the universe that we can see, the abundance of organics in molecular clouds is well known and they are well distributed in our galaxy. The goal of science is approximate models, never exacting recreation.But it isn't just the rate of reactions you are interested in. It is the conditions that led to these reactions in the first place.
That is why people who are careful use terms like 'seems likely' rather than 'it happened this way.'
Your criticism would strip away almost all of astronomy and physics in one fell swoop. We can’t know anything about the conditions in the past, we can only theorize and draw some tentative conclusions from the evidence.
It still seems likelier than not the earth’s moon was formed in a huge collision.
Where did the earth come from, what was it like, where did the impactor comes from, what was it like? We will never know, it is still a very valid theory.
Exact knowledge is not needed, we do now what Jupiter looks like and Triton.A much grander and deeper picture. My point about probabilities was meant to reflect this lack of knowledge.
Um all theories are approximate models, now it seems likely that at some point abiogenesis theories will reach the point where particulars can be falsified, that is the nature of science.If we want to extract a model and assign probabilities, we ought to have a basis for making the simplifications and enough understanding to say our model represents something real.
We don't know the mechanism of gravity either, should we throw out Kepler's laws?I agree, you can measure and detect amino acids. But the question is about abiogenesis verses creation, isn't it? How are these two statements different without knowing more about abiogenesis:
I never made an absolute statement, now did I, so of course I agree.1) I believe that chemistry is a good explanation for how life arose on Earth, but right now, I cannot elucidate the details.
There is no evidence of any design in the first place and they haven't even got a theory, so one far out strips the other.2) I believe an intelligent designer created life on Earth, but I cannot elucidate the details.
It is the very lack of fundamental, detailed models that brings up the questions.
The gaps in one do not equal the gaps in the other. There is no equality of gaps to hide in.
When ID is a coherent theory let me know, will you?
Nope they exist in an of them selves.That is correct, I do not understand frequency statistics. I suspect if they are valid you have to show some reason why they apply to the case you are using them to analyze.
You speak in too many absolutes, abiogenesis is a science theory , not a dogma.
Apologies then.
No problemo.