spidergoat
Valued Senior Member
There is no time-line problem with Earth-based abiogenesis.
There is no time-line problem with Earth-based abiogenesis.
That looks like you think there are 2 possibilities not 3.Which way does William of Ockham's razor tell us to go? We have to accept one of three difficult possibilities.
a) Evolution was greatly speeded up.
b) Transpermia.
Actually, I believe abiogenesis is about 150 years old not 1000.Terrestrial abiogenesis has been the scientific consensus since, well, since people first asked the question thousands of years ago.
Those ideas were wrong so abiogenesis must be wrong? That does not logically follow.I claim that it still is the scientific consensus, just as it was the scientific consensus that Wegner's continental drift theory was wrong,
and it was (in Galilleo's time) the scientific consensus that the Sun orbits the Earth, and, in Pasteur's time that maggots just appear
in rotting meat.
He had some pretty compelling evidence.Are you aware of the fact that Galilleo had no proof that the Earth orbits the Sun, although he desperately wanted it?
Well that is your claim and belief. I would need very compelling evidence to accept that since it seems like your 'transpermia' idea is rather convoluted and requires not only the difficulty of abiogenesis but the additional highly unlikely mode of transport to earth.Most scientists who express opinions about this subject agree with you, spidergoat. But I claim that they will be proved wrong.
The first step of the proof will be the confirmation that life, or the fossilized remains of life, in the Solar system belong to the same "tree of life" as
living things on the Earth. It will be a long time before transpermia to and from other systems will be confirmed, but it will be.
There is no time-line problem with Earth-based abiogenesis.
Not really.There is evidence for life 3.4 billion years old, after the crust solidified. Even 10 million years or so is a very long time.
What method are you using to measure the speed of evolution?Can you believe that the sophisticated machine that is the human body could have evolved in a mere 10 million years? Knowing how long various other things took to evolve, I certainly do not.
Nobody does. The minimum timespan over which human beings evolved was about 3 billion years.Have you ever spent an hour so more perusing Gray's Anatomy? Can you believe that the sophisticated machine that is the human body could have evolved in a mere 10 million years? Knowing how long various other things took to evolve, I certainly do not
A ribosome is not more complicated than a 747. A whirlwind in a junkyard would be the opposite of evolutionary development, not an analogy to it. And we have every reason to believe that early precursors of living beings, once launched, evolved much more rapidly than modern complex organisms - they had an entire completely uninhabited planet of resources and niches to spread into.You know the parable of the whirlwind in the junkyard. Well, the ribosome is more complex than a 747.
As for me it is easily to believe that some alien ventured in space exploration and landed on earth, and accidentally contaminated earth, in a similar way as we have contaminated Mars with our toys that have landed for explorationOrigins of life: New model may explain emergence of self-replication on early Earth
July 28, 2015
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A schematic drawing of template-assisted ligation, shown in this model to give rise to autocatalytic systems. Credit: Maslov and Tkachenko
When life on Earth began nearly 4 billion years ago, long before humans, dinosaurs or even the earliest single-celled forms of life roamed, it may have started as a hiccup rather than a roar: small, simple molecular building blocks known as "monomers" coming together into longer "polymer" chains and falling apart in the warm pools of primordial ooze over and over again.
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2015-07-life-emergence-self-replication-early-earth.html#jCp
Why do you think that's easy to believe?As for me it is easily to believe that some alien ventured in space exploration and landed on earth, and accidentally contaminated earth, in a similar way as we have contaminated Mars with our toys that have landed for exploration
Why do you think that's easy to believe?
How long do you imagine such a journey would have taken for this alien to get the Earth?