#535
You say that Something from nothing is hard; but something from something more complex defies observed ubiquitous principles. Sriram in his response (#536) to you gave an analogy with robots, where the arguments used against the idea of life being created are applied to robots. That, in my opinion illustrates the problem neatly. However, it was illustrated even more strongly by this in SusanDoris’ #538:
Which, in my opinion falsifies the argument that “something from something more complex defies observed ubiquitous principles.”
It is true that robots were invented and made by humans. That truth is not affected by whether or not the origin of human beings is known. To go with Sriram’s analogy, if robots had the ability to question their origin, then the types of arguments currently used against claims for life being created would also have to apply to the creator of robots, i.e. human beings! Because we know that human beings invent and make robots, all of these arguments would be false, as his post illustrated. This must surely indicate that similar arguments being used against claims that life may have been designed and created cannot be correct ones!
For some reason, this post puts me in mind of old creationist arguments that life contradicts the second law of thermodynamics. Clearly the growth of complexity in this cosmos is not a simple straightforward linear curve, there are many variations along that path, for instance we have something complex (termites) building something less complex (termite castles). So far so good. But because there are
instances of high complexity creating lower order complexity, we cannot from that extrapolate a complete invalidation of the underlying principle that generally and ultimately, higher order complexity derives from lower order complexity. Termites and termite mounds are but an instance of one variation creating a lower order variation but ultimately both termites and their mounds obey the underlying principle of emergence.
And to hop on over to Sriram's robot analogy, yes the robots could have been made by a superior biological species, and yes, they wouldn't have known that; and yes the higher order biological species might have been made in turn by a yet higher order of conscious silicon synths that the biologicals were unaware of. But the take home lesson from this, is that this cannot go on forever, we cannot go on climbing an upwards complexity ladder to explain things that we find hard to understand because
as an explanatory strategy it is doomed to fail. At some point, we just need to look down at where we have come from to understand things.