JustDave
Well-known Member
Many people see the beginning of life as some quantum leap from a rock to something that crawls or barks. OK that's a silly exaggeration. Lets say a leap from naturally forming compounds found in rock, some of which become organic once released, which form microscopic globs of assorted compounds that take on yet new properties just as every complex compound does without being identified as life. Prophets and clerics describe living things as being given "the spark of life," but that's a poetic disservice to natural chemical processes. Life doesn't have to be "given", and what the "spark" stuff is all about is baffling. Life is not worthy of miracle status that can only be described by poets. It's just chemistry, complicated chemistry, of course, and not perfectly understood, but natural and sometimes inevitable. But we are not talking about making frogs, mammals, and one celled protista. We are talking about making something far more simple than a bacterium, something that displays 6 or 7 properties which altogether define "alive."
But lets not wet our pants and exclaim, "Ooooh, it's alive," like Dr. Frankenstein. It's just a combination of compounds, each with special properties, that exhibit new chemical properties when they combine. OK, it's a complicated process, and it's currently a mystery. But the whole universe is a mystery, and probably a bigger mystery than life itself. It's not a mystery complicated enough that only religious dogma is capable of stepping up to the plate to declare with finality how and why it's there, and doing so without any chemistry, physics, peer reviews, or lifting a finger to experiment, and verify. It's just something no one fully understands.
I remember being awed in school by what happens when two deadly chemicals, sodium and clorine, come together and form harmless table salt. But it's not a big deal. This happens all the time in more ways than we can count in chemistry, and it gets more and more complicated as elements continue to combine into compounds, and more complex compounds, but it's natural, and doesn't require miracles to make it happen. That we don't understand it all is just our human ignorance, not the bad kind of ignorance like stupidity, just the simple and forgivable ignorance of not knowing at this time.
But lets not wet our pants and exclaim, "Ooooh, it's alive," like Dr. Frankenstein. It's just a combination of compounds, each with special properties, that exhibit new chemical properties when they combine. OK, it's a complicated process, and it's currently a mystery. But the whole universe is a mystery, and probably a bigger mystery than life itself. It's not a mystery complicated enough that only religious dogma is capable of stepping up to the plate to declare with finality how and why it's there, and doing so without any chemistry, physics, peer reviews, or lifting a finger to experiment, and verify. It's just something no one fully understands.
I remember being awed in school by what happens when two deadly chemicals, sodium and clorine, come together and form harmless table salt. But it's not a big deal. This happens all the time in more ways than we can count in chemistry, and it gets more and more complicated as elements continue to combine into compounds, and more complex compounds, but it's natural, and doesn't require miracles to make it happen. That we don't understand it all is just our human ignorance, not the bad kind of ignorance like stupidity, just the simple and forgivable ignorance of not knowing at this time.