Batarseh, Kareem I. (2007) The Primordial Seed of Life: Creation, Spontaneous Generation, and Emergence Theory. Creation Research Society Quarterly, 44 (3): 3.
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Abstract
In this work, I examine the origin of the universe in terms of the complexity and the order exhibited in terrestrial life by analyzing the universe’s design based on the "intelligent design" of creation. This paper is based on a repertoire of scientific resources and looks at whether an intelligent extraterrestrial "Creator" exists or the entire universe emanated merely from "spontaneous generation." Drawing on different examples extracted from mathematical, scientific, and philosophical resources, I hope to present a decisive argument about the gap that exists between real creation and the mere dogma of spontaneous generation. The emergence theory is discussed, and a tangible example of the failure of the emergence theory is given. The results suggest that two ostensibly very different aspects—not even acting in spaces having the same dimension—actually are equivalent. These two aspects are human perception and physics.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | B Philosophy (General) > BD Speculative Philosophy |
Depositing User: | Admin |
Date Deposited: | 18 Mar 2025 21:44 |
Last Modified: | 18 Mar 2025 21:45 |
URI: | https://crsq.creationresearch.org/id/eprint/1039 |