| Timmah! said: No, but a high level of ORDERLY complexity does. That's my point. The universe is complex, but generally chaotic. The climate system of the earth is incredibly complex, but there's also a very high level of chaos and unpredictability associated with it. Just ask any weatherman. I said nothing about mutations. Survival of the fittest is something that is very common. This is called Micro-evolution, or adaptions & changes within a species. This is a well documented and tested phenomenon. The point is not that living things can't undergo some changes from generation to generation, but that life cannot spontaneously form from a puddle of goo- that's what I'm saying. Edit: The earth's ecosystem & climate are complex and chaotic, but there is also some order to it that points to intelligence. The moon is the exact size and distance from the earth to create the tides, keeping the oceans clean. Without that, life wouldn't be possible. The combination of temperature, the correct mix of gasses, the correct amount of particles in the air to create clouds, tilt of the earth to create seasons, etc all work together to form a perfect 'bubble' for life in a very inhospitable universe. The chance of one of these factors being correct by natural means alone isn't that far fetched- it's when you calculate the probability that ALL of them would be so exact in ONE place that chance begins to look very unlikely. |
A high level of orderly complexity? You've provided absolutely no proof of that.







