"In the beginning God created the heavens and the Earth. Now the earth was formless and empty darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said "let there be light," and there was light. God saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from the darkness. God called the light "day", and the darkness he called "night." And there was evening, and there was morning-- the first day." Genesis 1:1-5. Go and read the bible, and the answer will be revealed.
Go and read the bible not what some smelly guy made up ok.
As far as I can tell the people who made up the Bible didn;t exactly have deoderant. And not it is not ok to call eeerrr... "scientists" I assume "smelly guys" they invent all kinds of perfumes and deoderants etc.
Go and read the bible not wat some smelly guy made up ok.
The guys who wrote up the Bible were smelly. ------------ I would argue with you about this, but you would probably fall back on unsubstantiated claims and opinion so much, that I would probably make more progress arguing with a frog about the best HDTV set on the market. Frogs know good picture. *walks off*
Never ask a pigeon I've been through that nightmare. THey have good eyes so they see the screen going slowly. We ned 25 frames a minute they need 250fps to make a moving image.
Life came about on Earth after chemicals around deep sea vents "decided" they could do a better job working together and eventually evolved into life (if you believe the soup idea)
Can two molecules really just "decide" they could do a better job working together? I'm not gonna sit here and tell you that God or some other higher power did it, but I really don't believe that the molecular complexity that is the DNA code could just "happen".
Oh no no I'm sorry, I didn't mean for that to sound mean towards your post... Your post actually basically sums up the primordial soup theory really well lol. I just meant that in my view, I look at the basis of life today; Just look at the DNA code, the processes of DNA replication, transcription, translation; look at a piece of onion under the microscope. I don't think that any of that stuff is "inevitable", or the result of random interactions between molecules over bazillions of years. I just personally don't believe its random.