Ah Jaysus, not this again
Abiogenesis is a description of something, what I said it was, in fact
Secondly, will you now admit that your idea of me "dodging questions" is you asking me unanswerable ones that you yourself won't even answer.. and anyone with a clue knows why. Deep down, you know that your God of the gaps stuff isn't the answer
Calling abiogenesis a “description” concedes the very point; it names the phenomenon without explaining it.
The question of how
semantically coded, error-correcting information emerged from unguided chemistry remains unanswered not because it’s a “God of the gaps” issue, but because it’s a
category problem: physical processes can describe syntax (arrangement of molecules), but not semantics (meaning).
My critique isn’t that “science hasn’t found the answer yet,” but that
no purely material framework can, even in principle, generate a symbolic coding system without invoking teleology or mind. That’s not a gap in data; it’s a gap in ontology.
That isn't a reason for it being a "contradiction"
It is a contradiction because you’re asserting two incompatible claims: that consciousness is
not brain activity, yet that a brain or body is
necessary for it. If consciousness isn’t reducible to matter, then matter cannot be a necessary condition for its existence; if it
is necessary, then you’re tying consciousness to material substrates after all.
You can’t have it both ways; correlation without dependence is incoherent.
The real issue isn’t semantics but ontology: either consciousness is ontologically distinct from matter, or it’s an emergent property
of matter. Simply saying “we don’t fully understand it yet” avoids that logical fork, but it doesn’t resolve it.
Tiger 4 - 0 Jimmy