“Darwin
also didn’t have anything to say about how life got started in the first place
— which still leaves a mighty big role for God to play, for those who are so
inclined. But that could be about to change, and things could get a whole
lot worse for creationists because of Jeremy England, a young MIT professor
who’s proposed a theory, based in thermodynamics, showing that the emergence of
life was not accidental, but necessary. “[U]nder certain conditions, matter
inexorably acquires the key physical attribute associated with life,” he was
quoted as saying in an article in Quanta
magazine early in 2014, that’s since been republished by Scientific
American and, more recently, by Business Insider. In essence, he’s saying, life
itself evolved out of simpler non-living systems.
“The notion of an evolutionary process
broader than life itself is not entirely new. Indeed, there’s evidence,
recounted by Eric Havelock in “The Liberal Temper
in Greek Politics,” that it was held by the pre-Socratic natural
philosophers, who also first gave us the concept of the atom, among many other
things. But unlike them or other earlier precursors, England has a specific, unifying,
testable evolutionary mechanism in mind.”
-- Paul Rosenberg
in Salon, January 3, 2015.
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