#535
If the principle of emergence implies something from nothing, then that would be a challenge for us to rise to. Nobody said stuff is easy and throwing out logic principles altogether to avoid the challenge would be one step forward but two steps back. That would be like Isaac Newton deciding that invisible magic pixies must be pulling apples down from trees; but he didn't do that, rather he rose to the challenge to think it through and thanks to that persistence we can now land robots on Mars. Something from nothing is hard; but something from something more complex defies observed ubiquitous principles. Magic pixies and gods are manifestations of a preference to avoid thinking things through imo.
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:
Re robots: Sriram seems to be putting forward the idea that robots could evolve naturally. They are, I would just like to mention, invented and made by humans so I think, if that is supposed to be an analogy, it doesn't work.
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!
I think your post mentions two extremes. On the one hand, invoking
God/the supernatural when it is not appropriate, on the other hand,
something from nothing. You mention
something from nothing being hard. From my perspective, I don’t disagree with it because it is hard, I disagree with it because I see what is known of the natural world contradicting it (e.g. Newton’s conservation of xxx laws). So the latest
fudge seems to be to extrapolate from emergence that is observable (consciousness, life
already existing) to try and explain that which is not observable (where that consciousness, life came from in the first place!). When anything is presented that would appear to falsify the proposition, it gets taken out of the picture and only applies to a
non-adaptive environment (my use of Newton’s laws, for example)! Therefore, pertinent to this are Ekim’s questions in #546 and #581 respectively
I notice that the word 'adaptive' has been introduced, which I don't remember seeing before. What causes one system to become adaptive as opposed to non-adaptive?
So to rephrase my question, what causes one piece of matter to initiate an adaptation to its environment and another piece to be non adaptive?