Those experiments are all treated as proofs of concept, but they're too limited in quantity and diversity of organic chemicals to legitimately prove the concept of abiogenesis. That is the point of me bringing it up. The so called "roof" fails to genuinely prove anything and the theory fails to live up to the standards of being, as Fish so loves to call it, absolute.
1 "Proof of concept" does not mean that the concept of abiogenesis is proven to be true. It means that it is proven to be feasible, which it is.
2 I can't stress enough that a theory which does not prove anything
HAS NOT FAILED. Theories are not meant to "
rove" things, because scientists understand that proof of
anything outside of mathematics and basic logic cannot ever be obtained.
3 In physics, when something is referred to as "absolute", "fundamental", or "universal", it means that it works the same way here and now as it would at any other time and place, which is what theories do. Looking back on the discussion, I made an error when I said that laws aren't absolute. It should have been "laws are not unconditionally applicable", but that wouldn't have been relevant; so, yes, laws are absolute ... but so are theories.
No, you just said "No". You did not provide an argument, you did not counter my argument...
You provided no argument; only a baseless assertion. Also; the analog (which is equally valid in every way, mind you) is this:
Every theist that ever existed in any field of science has denied the existence of any supreme being at least twice. Prove me wrong.
Let's see if you can come up with even
one counterexample.
Either learn to debate or don't bother replying because from now on anytime you just say "No" or "You're wrong" or something else in that line without any counterargument I'm just going to take it as "I don't have a way to argue with what you said but I don't want to acknowledge it."
1 This isn't a debate. It's a theological argument.
2 Sure, but that would be an argument from silence, which is bad practice, and still a failure on your part to address the challenges to your own claim, which is pure hypocrisy, and equivalent to discarding that point altogether, which is what I'd advise you to do anyway.
Since no one can prove whether those statements were honest or not, and even HahiHa is recognizing in his challenge that religious beliefs were far more common in the past, I have no reason to doubt that on some level these reportedly religious people were religious.
Commonplace ≠ Universal. There is nothing in your assertion or your response which even suggests that the "reportedly religious people" consist of "Every notable name in the history of science prior to Hawking".
That is what you need to explain and/or support.
If a theory cannot be tested then it cannot be falsified and is therefore not a real theory.
Which is why we don't call those theories.
In any case, I'm not sure what relevance of theories/laws is to the discussion. Just trying to clear up some misconceptions.
Unless I misunderstood him, Ishtaron was using the fact that no theory is technically "
roven" as support for his assertion that science has no sufficient explanation for the "big questions".
But I did not find any mention of Fish saying a theory was absolute. On the contrary, he specifically said that "1 Laws and theories can both, hypothetically, be falsified.".
My use of the term 'absolute' refers to its range of applicability; not its truth value. I assumed that was what he meant by it.