In the article I posted above Sagan says :
For myself, the idea that life arises on many worlds through the interaction of matter and energy - that is, by the consequences of the laws of physics and chemistry - seems a sufficiently ennobling prospect to satisfy anyone's predilections for the holy, and embraces that awe for the intricacy and subtlety of the cosmos which Einstein described as the deepest of religious feelings. But it is very hard to approach the question of the origin of life without coming to grips with religious sentiments of one sort or another.
He was not a believer in Intelligent Design .
For the sake of clarity he supports that life arises by the consequences of laws and physics .
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In the article I posted above Sagan says :For myself, the idea...
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