Quote from Scataphagos:
Jesus may have been a "real person"... but was he actually the "Son of God"?
Were stories about him factual or embellished?
Hard for us science-educated folks to accept anything about religion. However I recall Chemisty 100... the prof once made a statement something like, "... It's all so fantastic, the only explanation is Divine Creation". I went, "WTF?"
Dr. Fred Dewey. As fine a science teacher as there ever was... in spite of his belief in Creationism.
Dr. Dewey had it right...
http://web.mit.edu/rog/www/papers/does_origins.pdf
We now know that the probability of life arising by chance is far too low to
be plausible, hence there must be some deeper explanation that we are yet to
discover, given which the origin of life is atleastreasonably likely. Perhaps we
have little idea yet what form this explanation will takeâalthough of course it
will not appeal to the work of a rational agent; this is would be a desperate
last resort, if an option at allâbut we have every reason to look for such an
explanation, for we have every reason to think there is one.
In a detailed survey of the field, Iris Fry (1995, 2000) argues that although
the disagreements among origin of life theorists run very deep, relating to the
most basic features of the models they propose, the view sketched above is a
fundamental unifying assumption (one which Fry strongly endorses). Some
researchers in the field are even more optimistic of course. They believe that
they have already found the explanation, or at least have a good head start
on it. But their commitment to the thesis above is epistemically more basic,
in the sense that it motivated their research in the first place and even if their
theories were shown to be false, they would retain this basic assumption.
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