What de Duve said is unambiguous
So you try to make it ambiguous by introducing silly and confused arguments like the one below.
You seem to think that creating blurred misunderstanding about a categorical statement is a form of argument.
It's dishonest and deceitful.
It is quite clear that's what you are all about.
So you try to make it ambiguous by introducing silly and confused arguments like the one below.
You seem to think that creating blurred misunderstanding about a categorical statement is a form of argument.
It's dishonest and deceitful.
It is quite clear that's what you are all about.
Quote from jem:
this is what you said... de duve was saying..
"He said the actor was chance, and chance alone did it all."
then you take the quote above out of context... to make it look like de duve was stating that it was his belief that chance alone was the actor..
when if you were to quote the beginning of the sentence you would see that de duve stated that a branch of science (modern molecular biology) was says says that not de duve...
you are the fraud here.
here is the ny times article you cited.... quoted in pertinent part.
...
"If you equate the probability of the birth of a bacterial cell to that of the chance assembly of its component atoms," Dr. de Duve wrote in his textbook, "A Guided Tour of the Living Cell," "even eternity will not suffice to produce one for you. So you might as well accept, as do most scientists, that the process was completed in no more than one billion years and that it took place entirely on the surface of our planet."
The hard part, he wrote, was getting from the simplest chemicals to the first specialized cells, after which "it took no more than 150,000 generations for an ape to develop into the inventor of calculus."
As to whether some guiding hand was needed for the process, Dr. de Duve commented:
"The answer of modern molecular biology to this much-debated question is categorical: chance, and chance alone, did it all, from primeval soup to man, with only natural selection to sift its effects. This affirmation now rests on overwhelming factual evidence."
But the succession of chances that created life did not operate in a vacuum, he said. "It operated in a universe governed by orderly laws and made of matter endowed with specific properties. These laws and properties are the constraints that shape evolutionary roulette and restrict the numbers that can turn up. Among these numbers are life and all its wonders, including the conscious mind."