- #36
M Quack
- 893
- 67
rasp said:M Quack, I think you misundertand the enormity of the odds in equating the origion of life to winning the lottery. Of course, unlikely events happen in finite space time. I also admit that whatever can happen, will happen in infinite time. However, it is my understanding that the mechanisms required to start life on Earth are so unlikely to have come together in a finite universe as to be mathematically indistinguishable from impossible. It is therefore absurd to think a prior that it would happen "by itself". However, it did happen, but posterior the Anthropic principle, which is more a description of several unlikely events is small comfort as an explanatory tool.
Winning the jackpot of being alive in a sterile universe is certainly less likely than winning this weeks lottery draw. As to how likely exactly and possibly even "mathematically indistinguishable from impossible" (whatever that may mean) - I don't think there is enough data to make such sweeping statements. Not so long ago there were estimates that resulted in the conclusion "so where is everyone". Even today estimated values of the Drake equation range from 10^-20 to 182 millions (10^8).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_equation
This enormous spread of 28 orders of magnitude shows just how little we know about the conditions needed for the emergence of life as we currently know it.