For the alternative theorists:

Whoa...Trippy, please do not misunderstand what I Posted, please...please!
I was merely expressing my incredulousness that what I Grok'd nearly 45 years ago earned me a "nod in agreement".

I have not gotten a lot of them in the past 10-months or so on SciForums.

So...I completely understood that you were explicitly stating that I did understand!

Not a Biggie!
Cool Beans, aye!!

cancan.gif
 
I've already explained this to you.

And we agreed that evolution could produce homochirality, so automatically then we agreed both chiral forms organisms were already assembled by abiogenesis, and were "fighting" for resources. Therefore, chirality is not a factor in abiogenesis, and is explained by evolution. It's only later you came up with this assumption that abiogenesis requires some special proportion of left and right handed amino acids to lift off. These two are contradicting theories, pick one. I say it's evolution and it's pretty sound theory, do you wish to disagree now after we have already agreed on it before?


No, only when we start off with an excess of left handed amino acids to begin with, even then, it may not be the best answer.

You are talking about RNA and DNA, those are very refined products of millions of years of evolution. They shed off their resilience to bi-chirality in favor of other functions, but replicating molecules in organisms at the very beginnings of abiogenesis were far more robust or indifferent about it, naturally.


And what if right handed amino acid based life arose before lefthanded?

Sure, why not, indeed. That's much more sound than to assume abiogenesis couldn't have started without some special ratio, when we know both chiral forms are equally stable and reactive. They are just toxic to each other, so they did something about it. There was either "war" or "symbiosis", or perhaps more likely there was both, a little bit of making war, and then a little bit of making love, then war again, and so on, as usual.


No, proteins are broken into amino acids and other contituents then absorbed or excreted as required.

But organisms grow, new proteins must come from somewhere. So why would it need to come already assembled from the environment, why couldn't have those organisms assemble their own amino acids from simple non-chiral molecules? -- By the way, what is counterpart for protein in plants? How far is grass DNA from human DNA?


There are these funny things called emergent properties that molecules have that are not present when we consider the individual atom. The example I gave - n-butanol versus tert-butanol. They have all of the same atoms, they're just just arranged differently so have different emergent properties and different chemistry. Same with the difference between D-thalidomide, and L-thalidomide - they have all the same atoms, but arranged differently, and so they have different emergent properties as a molecule.

Yes, but can you say those emergent properties are anything but a direct consequence of what is going on a smaller scale? Can those "collective" emergent properties do anything else but that which is defined by interaction between electrons and protons and whatever else is within atoms themselves? Can those emergent properties possibly function independently of the function of their parts?
 
Your interpretation of what I said is very literal, for some reason. You missed the mark.

What is molecule of organisms? The answer is: family
What is molecule of families? The answer is: society
What is molecule of societies? The answer is: race
What is molecule of races? The answer is: ecosystem
What is molecule of ecosystems? The answer is: planet
What is molecule of planets? The answer is: solar system
What is molecule of solar systems? The answer is: galaxy
What is molecule of galaxies? The answer is: universe
What is molecule of universes? The answer is: it does not compute


Do you see what is supposed to be the meaning of the word "molecule"? Should I say "symbiosis"? What word do you suggest we should use to describe this relation between parts and their collective self?

You are inventing an entire language now. Your use of the word molecule for describing all of the above might be useful in poetry, but it has nothing to do with science or even proper english.

The proper generic word for all those configurations is "systems". Molecules are systems, but a system is not a molecule, unless it is a very specific kind of system, which was not even included in your list!

But if you want to create a fundamental common denominator, then a molecule of universes could be called a universal molecule. And for a closing line, we would need to conclude that "God is a molecule". Do you see the conflict in the physical part of that condition?

A molecule is a group of two or more atoms that stick together. Molecules (MOLL-uh-cyools) are so small that nobody can see them, except with an electron microscope. Pretty much everything on Earth and other planets is made of molecules, and so is some of the dust in space.
 
Last edited:
You are inventing an entire language now. Your use of the word molecule might be useful in poetry, but it has nothing to do with science or even proper english.

The proper generic word for all those configurations is "systems". Molecules are systems, but a system is not a molecule, unless it is a very specific kind of system.

It's the logic implicit in the semantics. I thought it was obvious what they all have in common is the relation between the parts and their collective self. Using the word "molecule" was supposed to illustrate invariance of the scale of magnification. The question is not only where "alive" begins on that scale, but also where it ends.

- atom is system of electrons and protons
- molecule is system of atoms
- cell is system of molecules [ALIVE]
- organism is system of cells [ALIVE]

- family is system of organisms
- society is system of families
- race is system of societies
- ecosystem is system of races
- planet is system of ecosystems
- solar system is system of planets
- galaxy is system of solar systems
- universe is system of galaxies

All these systems are consequence of the basic quantum particles interactions, and yet at some point there are few of these systems we call "alive". But where is the difference, really, can we honestly say these systems are not already alive on atomic level, or can we really say they stop being alive at the scale of families, ecosystems or planets?
 
It's the logic implicit in the semantics. I thought it was obvious what they all have in common is the relation between the parts and their collective self. Using the word "molecule" was supposed to illustrate invariance of the scale of magnification. The question is not only where "alive" begins on that scale, but also where it ends.

- atom is system of electrons and protons
- molecule is system of atoms
- cell is system of molecules [ALIVE]
- organism is system of cells [ALIVE]

- family is system of organisms
- society is system of families
- race is system of societies
- ecosystem is system of races
- planet is system of ecosystems
- solar system is system of planets
- galaxy is system of solar systems
- universe is system of galaxies

All these systems are consequence of the basic quantum particles interactions, and yet at some point there are few of these systems we call "alive". But where is the difference, really, can we honestly say these systems are not already alive on atomic level, or can we really say they stop being alive at the scale of families, ecosystems or planets?

I agree, but rather than calling everything as part of a "living" system, I prefer to use the word, "dynamic" system (which includes life).
Bohm calls it the "Holomovement"
 
That's the question, kind of. I say if the laws of physics are unchangeable then "free will" can not make any difference. For free will to exist it must be able not only to bend the laws of physics, but rule over them. Telekinesis, literally - mind over matter. Without actual power of telekinesis free mind can not exist. It's pure logic. If it cannot command, then it must obey. And if it must obey, then it is not free. Isn't that right?


?? :)
The laws of the Universe came first.
They were probably, almost certainly established at the BB.
Free will evolved later.
 
In relation to my previous post...What if one day in the distant future, we were able to enter a Kerr metric BH via its polar regions. If we were to adjust our trajectory to pass midway through the ring singularity, would we pass into another Universe??...or a different time and space in this Universe. How would the law of physics and GR handle that scenario?
I guess in that particular situation, we can only speculate as yet.
 
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/
These previous points are all evidence of macroevolution alone; the evidence and the conclusion are independent of any specific gradualistic explanatory mechanisms for the origin and evolution of macroevolutionary adaptations. This is why scientists call universal common descent the "fact of evolution". As explained in the introduction, none of the predictions directly address how macroevolution has occurred; nevertheless, the validity of the macroevolutionary conclusion does not depend on whether Darwinism, Lamarckism (i.e. inheritance of acquired characaters), or something else is the true mechanism of adaptive evolutionary change. The macroevolutionary conclusion stands, regardless.
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
This point has an interesting parallel in physics. Newton's theory of universal gravitation describes a phenomenon of matter, just as macroevolution describes a phenomenon of life. The theory of universal gravitation is also independent of the specific explanatory mechanism for gravity, and in fact Newton never gave a mechanism for gravity. Why does the force between two masses follow the inverse square law and not another law (perhaps an inverse cube law)? It took nearly 300 years before any plausible mechanisms for gravity were proposed (by quantum field theorists). None of these proposed mechanisms currently have any experimental support. Additionally, theories of gravity are strictly dependent upon the concept of mass, and there currently is no empirically supported mechanism for giving mass to matter. Charles Darwin is considered such a great scientific mind because, unlike Newton and Einstein who proposed only descriptive theories, Darwin proposed both a descriptive theory and a plausible mechanism. That mechanism is, of course, heritable variation with natural selection.
 
do you dispute anything it has to say?

Exercise your critical thinking and readin skills.

Read my posts to humble telescope, compare it to what's said on your sources and tell me if they actually contradict anything I have said.
 
And we agreed that evolution could produce homochirality, so automatically then we agreed both chiral forms organisms were already assembled by abiogenesis, and were "fighting" for resources. Therefore, chirality is not a factor in abiogenesis, and is explained by evolution.
Nonsense. I agreed to no such thing and if that's what you've taken from my posts then you're wasting my time and yours.

It's only later you came up with this assumption that abiogenesis requires some special proportion of left and right handed amino acids to lift off. These two are contradicting theories, pick one. I say it's evolution and it's pretty sound theory, do you wish to disagree now after we have already agreed on it before?
More nonsense, you've completely misrepresented what I have actually said.

You are talking about RNA and DNA, those are very refined products of millions of years of evolution. They shed off their resilience to bi-chirality in favor of other functions, but replicating molecules in organisms at the very beginnings of abiogenesis were far more robust or indifferent about it, naturally.
This is an assumption presented as fact.

Sure, why not, indeed. That's much more sound than to assume abiogenesis couldn't have started without some special ratio, when we know both chiral forms are equally stable and reactive. They are just toxic to each other, so they did something about it. There was either "war" or "symbiosis", or perhaps more likely there was both, a little bit of making war, and then a little bit of making love, then war again, and so on, as usual.
A nonsense misrepresentation of anything I have actually said.

But organisms grow, new proteins must come from somewhere. So why would it need to come already assembled from the environment, why couldn't have those organisms assemble their own amino acids from simple non-chiral molecules? -- By the way, what is counterpart for protein in plants? How far is grass DNA from human DNA?
Are you serious? Go look into the protein content of fresh fruit and vegetables at some point.

Proteins are not the same things as amino acids, amino acids are the lego that make protein.

Yes, but can you say those emergent properties are anything but a direct consequence of what is going on a smaller scale? Can those "collective" emergent properties do anything else but that which is defined by interaction between electrons and protons and whatever else is within atoms themselves? Can those emergent properties possibly function independently of the function of their parts?
This makes little or no sense as a question, please rephrase.
 
Exercise your critical thinking and readin skills.

Read my posts to humble telescope, compare it to what's said on your sources and tell me if they actually contradict anything I have said.
do you or do you not dispute anything the site has to say about chirality.
i want to know because you gave me 2 infractions for that post.
and i want to know why.
 
do you or do you not dispute anything the site has to say about chirality.
i want to know because you gave me 2 infractions for that post.
and i want to know why.

I, in fact, gave you only one infraction (the first was an error, I didn't click warning), and I thought it was fairly self explanatory why.

Again, I challenge you to exercise your critical thinking and reading faculties.
 
That's not it. Your mind has to "drive" your body and command it to do those certain things. If your physical body is governed by the laws of physics, then how can your mind make it do anything different? It follows from there then for your mind to be able to control your body it need the power to violate the laws of physics and take control over them, it needs the power of telekinesis, i.e. "mind over matter". Right?

We sure feel that we do have "free will", but I'm talking about reality and what it takes for that to actually be true, rather than just an illusion. Would you agree then "free will" can not exist because it would require ability to violate laws of physics and we know they are unchangeable and cannot be violated?

But I'm serious, it's inescapable logical conclusion. Isn't it? So not to make people screamingly run away from this topic, perhaps Star Wars and the "Force" would be more gentle comparison.

In the context of your applied "logic(?)", the laws of physics have exactly two things to do with "free will" :
1.) - diddley
...and
2.) - squat
 
I, in fact, gave you only one infraction (the first was an error, I didn't click warning), and I thought it was fairly self explanatory why.
how was the post trolling trippy?
how was the post meaningless?
Again, I challenge you to exercise your critical thinking and reading faculties.
in other words you are refusing to address the following question:
do you or do you not dispute anything the site has to say about chirality.

refusing to acknowledge valid evidence is the mark of a coward.
 
Back
Top