Every single experiment produced evidence that it didn't happen.
That is necessarily incorrect. A correct statement would be: "Every single experiment produced evidence that it didn't happen according to the precise protocol and under the precise conditions used in the experiment, which are a subset of all possible protocols and conditions." This does in no way imply that abiogenesis didn't happen, period.
What "pesky intermediate forms"? There are none, absolutely none, zilch, nada.
It is important that you learn, early in this discussion, that there are only a few, very specific, ways in which this statement can be true:
1. The first organism to exist -- whether it was created through abiogenesis or through divine fiat -- is immortal and incapable of reproduction, thus being the only organism that has ever existed, and is the only organism that exists now (provided it does, indeed, still exist, of course).
2. All organisms are created by special event at a zygotic event disconnected from previous and subsequent generations, requiring a continual process of creation events every time an organism is conceived.
These are your only options for supporting your statement; I suggest you choose one or the other, and then present your evidence for them.
The reason for this is simple: if there is a succession of generations, each given individual is an intermediate form between its immediate ancestor and its immediate progeny (provided there is any). This is true, whether or not any of the three generations differ in any character at all. The three generations may be genetically, morphologically, ecologically, anatomically, physiologically, and behaviorally identical, as well as identical in all other imaginable ways, but the middle generation will still be intermediate between its ancestor and its progeny (if there is any) simply by its spatial position on the tree of life.
This is true, for instance, for asexually reproducing organisms, which, some argue, can be said to actually be "immortal" (although they have traditionally been assumed to have very short organismal lifespans (1)). However, many organisms are not asexual, which, due to the way sexual reproduction works, implies that variation in traits other than spatial position on the tree of life may occur. The evidence for variation in traits over time is so extensive, that I feel no need to back up this claim unless challenged to do so.
Now, if any trait other than spatial position in the tree of life varies throughout a lineage over time, any given individual organism necessarily links its immediate ancestors and its immediate progeny (if any), which means that the traits manifest in the selected individual is linked both backwards in time to those of its immediate ancestors, of which it can roughly (and somewhat incorrectly) be said to be a subset, and forward to those of its progeny (if any), in which only a subset (the term is again used as an approximation) of the given individuals traits are manifest or latent.
The only two loop holes from this argument -- which basically is an elaboration of the famous "every individual is an intermediate form" argument -- are outlined above, viz. single-organismal constancy over geological time, or continual, repeated creation. Please select which explanation you prefer.
If it is not possible for me to describe the designer, his/her nature, that proves nothing other than I don't know who he/she is/was. Your reasoning is inconsistent.
How interesting that you should use the word "inconsistent". You will naturally agree that consistency demands that if the following statement is true:
"If it is not possible for me to describe the designer, his/her nature, that proves nothing other than I don't know who he/she is/was."
then the following statement must also be true:
"If all hitherto performed experiments on abiogenesis have failed accurately reconstruct any such events, that proves nothing other than that the researchers performing these experiments do not know how it happened"
And not, as you previously stated:
Every single experiment produced evidence that it didn't happen.
Anyway, I saw a documentary last month about a dig done my a Chinese archeologist who claims otherwise. I need to look it up.
Yeah, I wouldn't put the name of a documentary very high on the list of things you actually
need to look up.
It requires a mind committed to "no god did it" to continue with it.
It requires no such thing. It requires precisely this: a familiarity with the principle of parsimony, and the courage to apply it in your research. Nothing more, nothing less. That, in itself, is a lesson in parsimony.
The current theory does not fit the observations.
Curiously, the theory of evolution fits the observations I have made in my own research (I am a biologist, working with the evolutionary relationships of bird parasites). It also fits with the observations of my supervisor, who works with birds, as well as the observations of my ex-supervisor, who works with annelids, the researchers in my department who work with ctenophors, polychaets, nemerteans, and entoprocts. It fits with the research and observations of my fellow PhD students at my university, working with fungus gnats, various orders of mushrooms, several orders of plants, and some algae. A post-doc here is mainly working on whole-metazoan phylogenies, and the theory of evolution fits his observations on that level. I am also interested in similar research on a variety of animal groups, and try to read as much as I can. With the proviso that I don't have time to read everything, I will claim that to my knowledge, the theory of evolution fits the observations in such diverse groups as collembolans, butterflies, amphibians, ungulates, and rotifers.
In short, I feel confident in saying that in all probability, the theory of evolution in its current form fits all metazoans, all plants, and all fungi. That leaves a pretty narrow window for you to throw your "it doesn't fit observation" stones at. But please: tell me more about the group of organisms for which the current theory of evolution does not fit the observations. As you can claim that is the case with such vim and boldness, I expect you will have no problems finding more specific examples I have overlooked.
Otherwise, you could always contact the forum member Randman privately, and ask him for some examples, as he has made the same claim previously, without supporting it. Perhaps he can help you an, at the same time, present evidence for his own claims.
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(1) It's been five years since I worked with asexual organisms last, and the field may have moved on considerably. I know about the "ancient asexual scandals" that revealed that some organisms may have been asexual over very long time spans, but I can't remember off-hand what this was based on.