...and its relation....? ...its relation to abiogensis?
"Very few people understand evolution; even fewer understand that there are problems and challenges for the theory. They tend to think it's air-tight science. It's simply not.
And although many try to separate abiogenesis from neo-Darwinism like milk and cream, the two are inseparable. There is no Darwinism without abiogenesis. Evolutionary biologists know this (and that's why there's an increasing urgency to find life beyond the earth). Only those without a complete understanding of the theory think the two can be separated. The fossil record showing whole cell structures in the oldest of sedimentary rocks shows that life was present on the earth FAR earlier than previously thought, in far more advanced forms."
"Very few people understand evolution; even fewer understand that there are problems and challenges for the theory. They tend to think it's air-tight science. It's simply not.
And although many try to separate abiogenesis from neo-Darwinism like milk and cream, the two are inseparable. There is no Darwinism without abiogenesis. Evolutionary biologists know this (and that's why there's an increasing urgency to find life beyond the earth). Only those without a complete understanding of the theory think the two can be separated. The fossil record showing whole cell structures in the oldest of sedimentary rocks shows that life was present on the earth FAR earlier than previously thought, in far more advanced forms."