So, if god exists and he's the one behind all creation in general, evolution in particular, and if his preferred method is trial and error, it must be that good is not a genius who understands the ins and outs of creation and life but is actually a simpleton as herein defined. — TheMadFool
By the way, if the process of 'trial and error' doesn't belong to a very intelligent algorithm(s), I personally wouldn't be one of the fruits (humans), even after zillions of years of evolution on earth (if not the first living cells on earth came from somewhere in outer space).
Now 'trial and error' is used in what is known as 'Artificial Intelligence'. And I personally use it in some products I design. — KerimF
In other words the mainstream view seems to be that evolution disproves god and to incorporate evolution as part of god's creative act is a contradictio in terminis. — TheMadFool
Perhaps this is the "mainstream" view primarily among those already inclined not to believe in God, who are in fact, not actually the mainstream?
I would agree that evolution debunks a childlike Santa's workshop vision of God, which perhaps was prevalent among uneducated peasants of yesteryear. Beyond that, to me evolution seems a point in favor of an intelligent source to reality given that evolution is a self regulating mechanism. Not proof of God, just a point scored for the theist team.
However, that said, I remain persuaded that the theist vs. atheist paradigm is probably so hopelessly flawed as to be largely useless, and that whatever the reality is it likely bears little resemblance to that debate. Generally speaking, my sense is that that debate persists because it's like a familiar card game where everyone knows the rules and thus can be comfortable and generally lazy in playing their preferred cards — Hippyhead
Fantastic!. If you have the time and the computing power, no one will hold it against you that you solved a problem using trial and error. — TheMadFool
My main worry is that there's randomness in the universe and if one can't control it the best technique is trial and error. — TheMadFool
Sorry, I had to be clearer.
When the inputs to a system couldn't be known for certain, the programmer assumes estimated values and conditions for every possible input which is not included on the list of the known ones.
Then, he has to find out suitable algorithms that let the system adjust the primitive estimated values and conditions anytime it is hit by what was considered unknown input. This may be seen as 'trial and error' because the optimum adjust may not be achieved at the first time/try. — KerimF
Sorry, what do you mean by randomness? Perhaps a practical example can clarify it. Thank you. — KerimF
I'm going to try and prove that god is a simpleton, a simpleton herein meaning a being that far from being a genius is actually possessed of only child-like intelligence, even apish I might add. — TheMadFool
It could be the case that God created the world and His creations are making their own free will decisions and sometimes use trial and error to make those decisions. — Naomi
All adult human beings do at least one of the following examples of trial and error:
Dating
Working (It seems rare for someone to work one job for one company for the entirety of his adult life)
Moving homes
Trying different hobbies
Trying different foods — Naomi
One could say that God is omniscient and the reason He chose to create the world in the way that He did is only perplexing to us because we have limited understanding. — Naomi
We know that the universe is governed by laws, mathematical ones at that. — TheMadFool
This is doubtful. The universe is orderly, and we represent that order with mathematics. But as we know, human representations are fallible, so we cannot say that the thing represented is the same as the representation. To say that what causes order in the universe is mathematics, is simply to assume a Pythagorean or Platonist idealism without understanding the separation between the cause of order and the human representation of order. — Metaphysician Undercover
Name a law of nature that isn't mathematical and then we can talk. Plus, the fundamental sciences - chemistry and physics - are completely mathematized. If the ingredients are mathematical, then everything that uses these ingredients must, as of necessity, be mathematical, right? — TheMadFool
Do you see the difference between the representation (mathematical), and the thing represented? Some people refer to this as the difference between the map and the territory. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are mathematical theories, axiomatic systems as it were, that fit perfectly with some, possibly all, aspects of reality which, in my humble opinion, bespeaks that reality itself is mathematical. — TheMadFool
a mathematician's abstract theory may turn out to be just the thing we need to make sense of reality. — TheMadFool
In short, math is not just a map, it's proven itself, on many occasions, to be the territory itself. — TheMadFool
Actually, they fit together with the way that reality is perceived by us. And our perceptions of reality are produced by our living systems, just like our mathematical theories are. So I'd say that it's not a coincidence that they fit together, but it's clearly not evidence that reality itself is mathematical. Can we say that living beings live in an environment and they have specific needs? Wouldn't you think that the systems which they produce, such as their capacity to move, their capacity to perceive, and even conscious theories, are designed so as to fulfill some needs, rather than as a representation of reality? — Metaphysician Undercover
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