actually it's a requirement of the argument from your side.Indeed.
Yet again, with his wonderful analogies, he fails to take into account decay of biological matter in the absence of certain things - i.e. the brain decays as soon as you "switch it off" rendering it unable to be restarted. The light bulb does not decay.
And he uses this difference to try to persuade us that it is consciousness preventing the switching on again within a brain.
Now, if lightbulbs, once switched on for the first time, started to decay as soon as they were switched off again, the analogy might be better - but then of course the conclusions able to be drawn would be very different. So no wonder he doesn't use more accurate analogies.
Marvellous.
if you want to argue that life does not exclusively arise from life, you have to provide an example of taking matter and creating life from it.
If you can't do that, you simply have an issue of theory.
:shrug: