Randall
J. Randall Murphy
That's fine. Maybe there was no Big Bang. Or maybe there have been multiple Big Bangs. How all the initial materials got here in the first place is largely irrelevant to the point, but it seems to me that it's the best hypothesis we've got so far for the observable universe.Actually, it seems to me that this entire materialistic paradigm is mostly a working hypothesis with far less evidence than what could be called convincing.
big bang – This concept is essentially the backwards extrapolation of currently observed characteristics of the universe, probably leaning heaviest on the so-called cosmological red-shift phenomenon. In any case, no one has any idea how all so-called originating matter and energy was accumulated into that conjectured tiny little dot that erupted, or fizzed, and that produced all that there is. No one knows why all the conjectured anti-matter and matter didn’t completely annihilate, but instead left a surplus of matter. Don’t even mention dark matter and dark energy. All in all, materialistic “best evidence” for the “big bang” is copiously speculative.
Again that's fine, but the alternatives to going with the accepted astrophysical theories of stellar and planetary formation don't stand up very well. Are we to suppose that everything just popped into existence completely formed? I suppose it could have, but I personally think that's nonsense, and if any sort of formation is involved, regardless of the process, once again it's irrelevant to the point because that still equates to emergence.> stars > planets – I wonder if somehow materialist scientists deny that Boyles Law was operating when they speculate on the origin of stars and planets. Not to mention that multitudes of the so-called “oldest” galaxies still look “young” with spiral arms in place. The only directly observed planets so far are in our solar system, and they all exhibit highly unexpected characteristics. Earth’s size, structure, accumulation of water, location from the sun, accompanying moon, magnetic field, etc., etc., etc., are just a few of the “goldilocks” parameters that are required to make it hospitable. Evidently the sun is tilted 7 degrees to the orbital ecliptic of the planets, which is a bit of a sticky wicket considering the conservation of momentum.
Although science isn't certain exactly how life formed here on Earth, it's a virtual certainty that it did, and that before the Earth existed no life could have existed on it. Therefore we're once again, the alternative is to suppose it just popped into existence along with everything else, which is pure nonsense given the scientific evidence used to extrapolate Earth's history. And again it's also beside the point. Regardless of how life came into existence here on Earth, the overwhelming evidence is that it did, and that it evolved. So we're still on track with emergence.> life on planets – At this stage, no materialist scientist has figured out a viable pathway for abiogenesis even here on earth where there is plenty to study and test. The postulated transformation of inert material to even the simplest life forms by materialistic-demanded “random events” has not even a glimmer of evidence. No one knows if the suggested protein world, DNA world, or RNA world is the best materialistic model for the alleged random emergence of biological life. The current requirement of the actual living entities that we know about to use only one hand of proteins, rather than both right or left-handed proteins that occur naturally, is another significant hurdle for mindless, inert randomness demanded by materialistic views.
Again you're focusing on explanations, and explanations are irrelevant to the point. Regardless of how complex life here came into being, somehow it did ( obviously ), which means we're still dealing with emergence.> complex life – The internal workings of cells are now known to depend on many exceedingly complex protein machines. As far as I know, complex machines are not readily produced by mindless random bombardment of inert particles and blasts of energy. DNA is not “like” a code, rather it is a code. How can materialist-demanded random events produce a highly constrained and complex life code? Beats me. Too, it’s interesting that more and more dinosaur fossils dated to tens and hundreds of millions of years by the materialist worldview are producing various kinds of soft tissue remains, including still-elastic tissues. The half-life for the degradation of such tissues is far, far below the proposed dates of the fossils.
Again you're focusing on explanations, and explanations are irrelevant to the point. Regardless of how intelligent life here came into being, somehow it did ( obviously ), which means we're still dealing with emergence.> Intelligent life – > life with consciousness – In short, it doesn’t seem reasonable to me that supposed mindless random mutations managed to produce greater and greater ordering of the DNA life code from merely fairly complex, going to the enormously complex.
Even if we suppose that there is a "directing mind" behind all the processes, we're still dealing with time and processes, which still amounts to emergence. The alternative is once again to suppose that everything, including the "directing mind" simply popped into existence whenever existence itself happened, which is about as nonsensical as supposing some "directing mind" caused the observable universe to simply pop into existence all at once with everything and every kind of creature, including intelligent ones with consciousness already fully formed.So, unless there actually is much more convincing “best evidence” for exclusive random materialism, then it seems there is plenty of room to conjecture that what we perceive in reality actually originates from a directing Mind, not merely inert materialistic randomness. In that case, then instead of emergence of consciousness, one might suggest imputation of consciousness to us individual conscious beings from the originating conscious Source. I have no idea why there should be an originating conscious Source, but it seems to me that a fair accounting of the current “best evidence” points to one.
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