Assumptions assumptions assumptions. — Christoffer
f you cannot define the dimensions, things or properties themselves, you cannot conclude anything, this is fact. — Christoffer
You make an assumption about how it happened, i.e there was a sentient creator, God, that's a pretty big assumption about pre-Big Bang, right? The reasoning you do assumes a sentient God as a property of something you cannot possibly know about at this time and you use that as a value to calculate. Why can't you see this flaw in your reasoning? — Christoffer
If the universe was designed for life, it must be said that it is a shockingly inefficient design. There are vast reaches of the universe in which life as we know it is clearly impossible: gravitational forces would be crushing, or radiation levels are too high for complex molecules to exist, or temperatures would make the formation of stable chemical bonds impossible... Fine-tuned for life? It would make more sense to ask why God designed a universe so inhospitable to life. — Robert L. Park
I can not calculate the probability of a unicorn standing in my backyard, but I can calculate the probability of a horse. How is this not crystal clear? — Christoffer
"Is there a creator?" is a vague question that through logic conclude it to be a sentient God, without nothing more than math. — Christoffer
Even with this reasoning, how can you conclude Big Bang to be unnatural if you don't know the things, properties or properties themselves of what was before Big Bang? How can you define if Big Bang was natural or unnatural when you don't have any data since science has no data on the event themselves? — Christoffer
What does that prove? How can you not just turn that around and say that because the universe evolved these 20 physical constants it enabled life to evolve? There's no connection between any intention of fine-tuning and the natural evolution from these constants to life. You apply the assumption that there can only be these constants if someone intended for life, which is only an assumption and therefore a fallacy. How can you possibly connect the constants to the intention of life? False cause fallacy if I ever saw one. Also, there are 22 known constants, not 20. — Christoffer
Nice try but its impossible. — Devans99
Being able to conceive of something does not make it possible; it has to be 'logically conceive' of something and existing forever is not logical. — Devans99
Also I can conceive of you not existing - there was a time when you were not born. — Devans99
Right, so that means my original proof that an infinite regress is impossible holds:
'We can also argue against this model by arguing against an infinite regress of (say) particle collisions (arranged by time). With infinite time, the number of collisions must be greater than any number, which is a contradiction (can’t be a number AND greater than any number).' — Devans99
The laws of physics do not 'evolve' - there is no selection mechanism. So these constants had to be set a precise values initially in order for life to occur. — Devans99
What is the difference between conceiving and logically conceiving? Why is existing forever not logical? — Echarmion
No, because infinity is not a number, and hence your final sentence doesn't hold. — Echarmion
How do you know the constants could have been any different from what they are? — Echarmion
My argument does not rely on dimensions. It uses the loosest possible definition of time (I don't assume eternalism or presentism). All it relies on is the presence of 'stuff' (matter/energy). — Devans99
I argue that the Big Bang was not natural or time is finite. Both of those are strongly suggestive of a sentient God. Pretty conclusively so when fine-tuning and other evidence is also taken into account. — Devans99
Its a shockingly efficient design if you ask me; the stars provide the energy, the planets provide the living surfaces. Gravity has to be strong to enable nuclear fusion and hence energy for live. And we have to have radiation else energy would not reach the places life lives. It's inevitable that not all parts of the universe would support life whatever universe design you use. — Devans99
And the fact that even the atom holds together is a miracle of fine-tuning - how likely is that in an arbitrary (non-fine tuned) universe? I think 99.999% of universes would just have particles endlessly bouncing off each other (no adhesion); nothing close to the amazing complexity of matter we have in our universe (see the periodic table and the compounds... all that diversity from just elections and quarks... and that diversity in matter is required to support life). — Devans99
You can calculate the probability of a 'unicorn standing in your back garden' as virtually zero. How has that got anything to do with the probability of 'is there a creator'? Unicorns are magical creatures and magic does not exist. Creators are not magical creatures. — Devans99
If I choose to define my creator as my God that is my prerogative. — Devans99
Natural things come in a multiplicity, unnatural things are singular. — Devans99
The laws of physics do not 'evolve' - there is no selection mechanism. So these constants had to be set a precise values initially in order for life to occur. — Devans99
I do not assume that 'there can only be these constants if someone intended for life' - I assigned it a 75% probability that fine-tuning implies a creator. A very conservative estimate, some people put in much higher than that. — Devans99
You don't even know which dimensions if at all or if by more, existed before Big Bang. Period. — Christoffer
Causation ≠ Correlation. You cannot apply God to that and you cannot decide if Big Bang was natural or not. Your fantasy correlations do not apply. — Christoffer
God is as real as a unicorn and your argument is as valid as calculating the probability of a unicorn. — Christoffer
Based on what? Your beliefs? — Christoffer
The laws of physics most likely (by scientific findings) came to be during Big Bang. You cannot conclude that these constants existed before Big Bang and you cannot conclude that they were set intentionally. — Christoffer
I've assumed that time exists in some form before the Big Bang. But if that assumption is false; time has a start anyway and my argument still holds. — Devans99
But we are doing statistics and probability here so correlation maybe causation depending on how much correlation there is and there is a lot. — Devans99
I'm a deist and that means I believe in science only; God has to be logically possible; not some magic invention of conventional religion. So God is not some mythical creature with the omnipotence, omnipresence etc... he is a real, viable being. So God is not in any way akin to a unicorn when it comes to calculation of probabilities. — Devans99
Based on logic; if it happens naturally it will happen infinite times (given infinite time). — Devans99
But if the constants were set during the big bang, they must of been set by something intelligent and that intelligent entity would require a fine tuned environment. That must of been fine tuned by someone else and so on it regresses until we find God. — Devans99
Existing forever throws up paradoxes. How can you do something if you don't start doing it? — Devans99
If you can solve the clock paradox I gave above, then you can have 'existing forever'... but that paradox is unsolvable. — Devans99
An equivalent paradox:
- Say you meet a being who has existed forever
- You notice he is counting
- You ask and he says ‘I’ve always been counting’
- What number is he on?
Unsolvable. — Devans99
Are you suggesting 'the number of collisions' is not a number? — Devans99
So for example, something like the atom is a fine balance between the strong nuclear force and the electromagnetic force; if either were slightly different (or if quarks or elections had a different nature) then atoms would not form or would be too unstable. — Devans99
Existing is not the same as existing and counting to infinity. The paradox doesn't apply. — Echarmion
Yes, I am saying that. That it sounds odd in the English language is not an argument. — Echarmion
And again how do you know these forces could have been set at different values? — Echarmion
I'm not sure he will understand further. The argument is stuck for him and he doesn't falsify it with our counter-arguments. So instead spamming the same thing over and over ignoring certain parts. It's almost troll-level reasoning right now. — Christoffer
But existing forever and counting is impossible. Counting is possible. So existing forever is not. — Devans99
What you are suggesting sounds impossible. How can numerical properties take on non-numerical values? — Devans99
Imagine for example if the strong nuclear force were weaker, then atomic nuclei would not hold together. You'd still have a viable universe; it's just there would be no life in that universe. Or if gravity were a bit weaker, stars would not form. Again still a viable universe; but no life. — Devans99
This is not proper logic. If A and B is impossible, but B is possible, it does not follow that a is impossible. It might be that the combination is impossible. — Echarmion
You are also incorrectly applying your own logic, as it should say "counting to infinity" not just counting. And counting to infinity is impossible. — Echarmion
There is not any numerical property to begin with. With infinite time, the number of collisions is also infinite — Echarmion
How exactly does counting make existing forever impossible? — Devans99
Counting to infinity is impossible because infinity does not exist. Counting is possible so my argument holds. — Devans99
There is a derived, whole integer, property of the system - the number of collisions - which must take on an infinite value; which is impossible (infinity is not an integer). — Devans99
Evangelists: Those who must convince everyone that their religion, ideology, political persuasion, or philosophical theory is the only one worth having.
Could this be an idea created by people to give them a sense of purpose or is there really a higher power that we have just yet to fully discover? — Franklin
Not so much over our heads as in our heads. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
wild speculation — Jake
Anyone claiming to know what is happening over our heads is arguing with the evidence provided by every other species ever to walk the face of the Earth — Jake
the problem with "no-seeum" argument is an incredibly long line of
times they were wrong.
Until we find such a thing as a virus there is no reason to believe one exists -
Until we find such a thing as an atom there is no reason to believe one exists -
Until we find such a thing as a quark there is no reason to believe one exists
— Rank Amateur
Except no one believed any of them until they were conceived as viable hypotheses and when observed and tested, confirmed as true. You also Texas Sharpshot-picked things that were proven, while there's an even longer list of things that we today laugh at that people believed.
You cannot hypothesis God since no argument for any kind of God leads to a notion of specifically God as the end of that hypothesis. All of those had a clear hypothesis, but everything about God arguments is wild assumptions and individual concepts.
Burden of proof applies always. An argument that uses the "if you cannot disprove it, it's real" is a flawed argument and it's why Russel had such an impact on science to force it to stick to truths and not fantasies or pseudoscience.
Your post reads like a conspiracy theory rant, specifically because it's the argument they use. The conclusion of what you say; would mean we can just give up any kind of attempt at discussing the world and universe since everyone can neatly stick to their own world-view and beliefs. I see no room for such nonsense in philosophy. — Christoffer
Surprisingly almost none of this is true. Each of those things that did not exist, until they existed began as a thought, an idea, a concept. And without doubt all of those ideas where scoffed, and dismissed. The real start of the scientific method is the idea of something new that becomes the hypothesis. — Rank Amateur
Why can't one believe God is? Is there some fact I should know that says there is no God, and my belief is outside fact? Is there some overwhelming reasoning that says God is not a reasonable concept? And my belief is in conflict with reason? Why do you feel such a need to challenge ideas of others not in conflict with fact or reason? It smacks of fundamentalism. — Rank Amateur
Russel's teapot is tactic, not argument. Russel desperately wanted a definitive argument that ended with, Therefore there is no God, he couldn't find one. — Rank Amateur
A virus, atom and quark didn't exist until we named them? — Christoffer
you are missing the point ot the entire argument - read again please - — Rank Amateur
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