How can a speck come alive on a sterile world that was melted at 6000 degrees at one time?
Vegetables are canned at 240 degrees. Can anything bring them back to life? So with a temperature of 6000 degrees how can life suddenly sprout from a sterile world?
If it could have been done it would have already been done under laboratory conditions.
Panspermia attempts to resolve this but actually just pushes the problem off onto another set of circumstances and more speculation. It is, I would assert, the scientific version of there being turtles all the way down.
Astounding as it may seem, DNA can be extracted, rehydrated, and sometimes reveal it’s makeup when analyzed...
From cremated remains.
If it could have been done it would have already been done under laboratory conditions.
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If you and I were to go into a modern laboratory with a dog, play with technology, and later, leave the laboratory with a new species, not-dog, it would be proclaimed as a proof of evolution. It is not.
It is proof that intelligence combined with technology can cause dog to become not-dog. There is no intelligent force behind the operation of the laws of science; if evolution occurred, it did so by random events.
It is interesting to consider that randomness. Consider little horse evolving to big horse (with a little bit of exaggeration on my part.) A gamma ray comes in and bam! little horse’s left rear leg is an inch longer. Hooray!
It is a fatal gene — little horse’s ability to escape predators has been compromised — he is dead meat. The random gamma ray would best soon lengthen the other legs.
Or suppose that a gamma ray causes little horse to have big horse’s teeth. Won’t work. Or, little horse’s heart blooms to big horse size. The pressure from that heart would blow the arteries and veins apart. You can’t have big horse’s muscles on little horse’s skeleton. Nor big horse’s eyes in little horse’s eye socket. This list is a long list.
It seems to me that the radiation must improve/increase every single minute aspect of little horse’s body before making the next improvement/increase; otherwise, little horse won’t make it.
One more thing: We know little horse was a species because little horse’s fossils are all we find. Let evolution happen and imagine that every little evolutionary change in little horse is successful and over time (a thousand years? ten thousand years?) that new version of little horse lives, dominates the land and leaves fossils. Repeat this a hundred, a thousand times until we get big horse. How could we identify a species — the fossil increments while continuous would be too small. We wouldn’t have separate species, we would have a “smear” of variations.