Of course there is no way I can read 290 pages on this forum so I guess someone has already pointed out this maybe, but
I just want to note that the whole discussion started, right from the start in message 1, with a non-so-true assumption:
jay_a2j wrote:Now science has said, Life cannot come from non-life. Which is common sense... a rock will never reproduce since it is not living.
Since has not said that *AT ALL*, and common sense does not match science many many times, and in fact in the well-known book "Seven Clues to the Origin of Life" Cairns-Smith states that life could indeed have come from non-life inorganic material. As I am lazy, I post here some part of a review that can be found in the web where that point is made more clear:
In "Seven Clues to the Origin of Life", A. G. Cairns-Smith, a molecular biologist and so on at the University of Glasgow, lays out in an amusing and chatty way (including numerous Sherlock Holmes quotations) his argument that yes the first replicator really couldn't have been any of the replicators that we have today, or even anything very much like them. And he presents his own theory as to what they in fact were: inorganic clay crystals of a certain type that seem to have (or seem capable of having) both the requisite ability to do a kind of very low-tech replication, and the potential to have eventually provided the platform on which our current much higher-tech replicators (DNA and all that) got their start.
So, regardless of whether God exists, it is quite a bad, though usual, technique to support an argument based on possibly false assumptions (that's exactly what science doesn't do!).