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HeKS is on a Roll

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In comments to my last post HeKS absolutely lays waste to two materialists who are trying to punch way above their weight.  First, Pindi spews out the million-times-rebutted claim that there is “no evidence” for the existence of God.

Pindi: And its not that I don’t want to believe in something that is god-like and personal. I just don’t see any evidence for it.

HeKS responds (not placed in quote box; all that follows is his unless noted otherwise):

Oh God, it’s the “there just isn’t any evidence” canard again.

I don’t know how atheists can even make this claim with a straight face anymore.

Here is a sampling of a few lines of evidence strongly pointing to God’s existence:

– The origin of the universe (including its matter, energy, space and physical laws) in the finite past

– The fine-tuning of the physical laws and initial conditions of the universe in a way that allows for the existence of intelligent life

– The fine-tuning of the universe for discoverability

– The fine-tuning of our solar system and planet for both life and discoverability

– The origin of life, which is roughly the equivalent of the origin of biological information

– Various events in the history of life that seem to show a large-scale influx of biological information that cannot be accounted for by any proposed mechanism of biological evolution that we are aware of. (Best explained by reference to God when taken in light of preceding items)

– Various other events in history that seem best explained by divine intervention and that would not be expected on naturalism or materialism (such as evidence supporting the resurrection of Christ).

– The apparent existence of objective moral values and duties, which people can’t seem to avoid invoking even while denying their existence (i.e. sneaking it in the back door after booting it out the front door)

– Various aspects of the mind, including the apparent existence of free will, the apparent existence of a rational consciousness capable of accurately perceiving external events and reasoning on them in a reliable way, the ability to have subjective experiences, and the ability to have thoughts that are about things.

These facts, conditions and states of affairs make God’s existence more likely than it would otherwise be in their absence or if they were different than they are, thus they constitute evidence for God’s existence.

If you want to say you’re not personally convinced and wouldn’t be unless God performed some miracle in front of your eyes for the sake of personally convincing you, fine. You’re entitled to your selective hyperskepticism. But stop claiming that there just isn’t any evidence for God’s existence. If you don’t want to accept God’s existence then it’s time to put on your bib and gobble up the multiverse. Bon appetit.

[Barry:  Then rvb8 weighs in:]

 all of the things HeKS listed, except for the starting point of the universe have competing, and better theorised natural answers.

HeKS responds:

My claim was that there is evidence for God’s existence. My claim was not that there is absolute proof for God’s existence or that God is the only conceivable explanation for the things listed. As such, this comment from you would be completely irrelevant to my point even if it were true. But then, it’s not true. And, in fact, it’s untrue on both counts, in that not all of the items in my list have competing “theorized natural answers”, and where they do, those competing natural answers are typically worse, not better.

Consider the list again…

– The origin of the universe (including its matter, energy, space and physical laws) in the finite past

You didn’t try to assert that there was a better competing naturalistic theory for this, so I won’t spend time on it. Suffice it to say that Krauss’ idea of a universe from “nothing”, in which “nothing” is the quantum vacuum, assumes the prior existence of all the things to be explained and doesn’t answer the philosophical issues involved.

– The fine-tuning of the physical laws and initial conditions of the universe in a way that allows for the existence of intelligent life

– The fine-tuning of the universe for discoverability

– The fine-tuning of our solar system and planet for both life and discoverability

In response to these you said:

HeKS uses ‘fine tuning’ three times and roles his eyes at the ‘lack of evidence for God’argument.

Actually, these three list items mention fine-tuning four times, because they are referring to four different categories of fine-tuning.

The fine-tuning of the laws of physics and initial conditions of the universe are a necessary (but not sufficient) condition for life to be even possible anywhere in the universe.

The fine-tuning of our solar system and planet for the existence of intelligent life, which includes a few hundred factors, is also necessary, but would be useless and in many cases impossible without the fine-tuning of the universe itself.

The fine-tuning of the universe for discoverability refers to the fact that the values of the laws of physics fall into an even more narrow range than the already inconceivably narrow range necessary for life, but instead fit within the subset of that life-permitting range that also allows the universe to be scientifically discoverable to intelligent beings.

This, however, would be useless if our own planet and solar system were not also fine-tuned in terms of their position and composition so as to also be conducive to scientific discovery

Now, in order to account for the fine tuning of the laws of physics and initial conditions of the universe, some appeal to a staggeringly expansive multiverse birthing off child universes in which the values are randomly determined, which they try to derive from some undetermined hypothetical connection between the purely theoretical concept of chaotic inflation and the much-maligned string theory, which is also purely theoretical.

It would take an unimaginable number of universes with randomly determined values to have a 51% chance of getting a universe that falls into the life-permitting range of our universe. But that would just be the beginning, because then you have all the other factors needed to make intelligent life possible at the level of the planet and solar system, all of which the atheist requires to have occurred by chance. The number of additional universes required to also get all these factors at the right values would dwarf the already unimaginably large collection of universes that have to be postulated just to explain the fine-tuning of the universe itself. And what reason do we have to postulate such a massive collective? Only that we need the probabilistic resources to explain the seemingly designed qualities of the cosmos by reference to chance alone.

But in addition to all of the problems that could be raised with the multiverse idea, we have another problem that is presented by the fine-tuning of both the universe and our planet and solar system for discoverability, which is that the characteristic of discoverability is not necessary for life and so it cannot be accounted for by reference to an observer selection effect at either the cosmic or the planetary scale. Were we just a random member of a multiverse, we would have no reason to expect that in addition to being in an incredibly unlikely universe that is capable of sustaining intelligent life, we would also be in an even more unlikely universe that is conducive to scientific discovery. So the multiverse doesn’t offer an alternative naturalistic explanation for this fine-tuning, unless we just want to throw our hands up and say that the multiverse explains literally every conceivable state of affairs as being the product of chance alone, destroying the foundation of science in the process.

Furthermore, as an explanation for the fine-tuning of the universe, the multiverse is highly ad hoc. Even Andrei Linde, who is responsible for the Chaotic Inflation theory that is sometimes appealed to as a possible means of getting many universes with different physics readily admits that any aspect of the theory leading to universes that have laws and constants with different values is purely speculative and that it’s the fine-tuning itself that gives us any reason to accept the speculation as possibly true.

So the competing naturalistic explanation for fine-tuning is ad hoc and explains either too little to match the explanatory scope of the God Hypothesis, or else it explains too much and undercuts science and rationality. And this in addition to the various other problems with it that have been raised (e.g. Boltzmann Brains, need for the multiverse itself to be fine-tuned, etc.)

– The origin of life, which is roughly the equivalent of the origin of biological information

There’s a better, viable, naturalistic theory in existence? Nope. Uh-uh. I don’t think so. No naturalistic OOL theory seems viable so far. If they’ve made any progress on OOL it is in finding out how much more unlikely it is on naturalism that was initially thought. Might they come up with something viable in the distant future? Perhaps, but as an argument, that’s a cheque that nobody has to cash, and this is a discussion about the actual current state of the evidence and our knowledge, not about undated naturalistic promissory notes.

– Various events in the history of life that seem to show a large-scale influx of biological information that cannot be accounted for by any proposed mechanism of biological evolution that we are aware of. (Best explained by reference to God when taken in light of preceding items)

I’m not even going to bother discussing this one since it gets talked about here all the time.

– Various other events in history that seem best explained by divine intervention and that would not be expected on naturalism or materialism (such as evidence supporting the resurrection of Christ).

The primary competing naturalistic theory is that hundreds of people had shared group visual and auditory hallucinations. That can only be considered a better explanation to someone who has an a priori and unwavering commitment to the non-existence of God and the impossibility of what, to us, appears miraculous.

– The apparent existence of objective moral values and duties, which people can’t seem to avoid invoking even while denying their existence (i.e. sneaking it in the back door after booting it out the front door)

The competing naturalistic theory is that objective moral values and duties do not exist. Verbally denying the existence of something while being unable to personally live as though that thing didn’t exist does not count as offering an alternative explanation for its existence. No viable alternative to God has been found for grounding objective moral values and duties, and yet countless atheists believe and live as though they exist.

– Various aspects of the mind, including the apparent existence of free will, the apparent existence of a rational consciousness capable of accurately perceiving external events and reasoning on them in a reliable way, the ability to have subjective experiences, and the ability to have thoughts that are about things.

And again, the competing naturalistic theory is that these things do not exist. Claiming that we don’t have free will, that there is no subjective observer, and that we cannot have thoughts that are about things and so can’t have rational consciousness capable or accurately perceiving reality or rationally deliberating on evidence is not an alternate naturalistic explanation for any of these things at all, much less a better explanation for their existence than God.

The God creation belief, equally raises the problem of ultimate origins, as does the Big Bang. Your ultimate cause, very sorry, needs a cause. Your ’causeless cause’ tedium is just that unsupported faith.

And yet, prior to the realization that the universe had an absolute beginning in the finite past, atheists were perfectly fine accepting, as a brute fact, the existence of the universe as an uncaused entity that had existedtemporally into an infinite past … and they are constantly trying to return to that view. This is not just the atheistic equivalent of the theist’s uncaused God. It is actually much worse, because even the theist doesn’t posit God as existing temporally through an infinite past.

Fine tuning, is a poor way to describe the natural constants that govern our universe, and if they are so fine tuned why didn’t God make the constants nice round numbers? Was He constrained by something? His own creation perhaps?

What a bizarre argument. The values aren’t fine-tuned because they are astronomically more precise than simple whole numbers? You know, do you, that a super-intellect would only use “nice round numbers”? It’s strange that you think the universe ought to be mathematically describable at all on naturalism.

Also, of course God was constrained by his own creation. It is a simple fact of physical instantiation that starting points constrain end points, that pathways constrain outputs, that present choices constrain downstream options, that functional coherence constrains the relationship between parts. I’m not sure why you would find any of this surprising.

Barry again:  Well done HeKS.

Comments
Dionisio @76 What do I think about it? It is blindness only grace can healharry
September 8, 2016
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D, this is not the Russian Physicist. KFkairosfocus
September 8, 2016
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Eugen @89
Atheists who comment here didn’t provide serious arguments for their case since I started visiting UD.
Interesting comment. Thank you. What do you think would qualify as a serious argument in the given context? What do you mean by 'their case'? Thank you. PS. Do they call you 'Zhenya'? Is your original name Yevgeny? I'm just curious. Thank you.Dionisio
September 8, 2016
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Autodidaktos @88: Interesting comment. Thank you. Please, tell me: How did that happen? Why? Thank you.Dionisio
September 8, 2016
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WJM @ 86,
I realized that I wanted to believe in god
Please, tell me briefly: believe in god? What's that? What do you mean by 'god'? What do you mean by 'believe' within this given context? Thank you.Dionisio
September 8, 2016
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WJM @ 86,
I realized that I wanted to believe in god
Please, tell me briefly: How did you realize it? Did you always want it? Why did you want it? Thank you.Dionisio
September 8, 2016
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WJM @ 86,
Those who debate here [1]are never really interested in the kind of introspective analysis that such arguments require. More or less, IMO, [2]they are largely just interested in reassuring themselves about their views by engaging in certain common anti-theistic narratives.
Interesting observation. Please, tell me briefly: Do you know why [1] and [2]? Thank you. [Emphasis mine]Dionisio
September 8, 2016
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I'm one such visitor who learned a lot from discussions on this forum. I mostly read in the background but also write occasional comment. Atheists who comment here didn't provide serious arguments for their case since I started visiting UD. I encourage them to try harder. Maybe one such atheist appears some day but I doubt that. I think atheists were offered post privileges if they are willing to come up with something interesting.Eugen
September 8, 2016
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"I wonder how many theists have become so because they have found the cosmological argument compelling?" Dr. Edward Feser, philosopher and Catholic writer, for one. Also, several of my Catholic friends, some of whom have gone on to study Philosophy in university. One of them graduated with honours from Oxford last year.Autodidaktos
September 7, 2016
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WJM @ 86,
One wonders why such pitiful biological automatons bother making noises with their mouths at all when none of it can be counted on to have any valid meaning whatsoever.
Yes, that's a good point. Thank you.Dionisio
September 7, 2016
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Dionosio @76, Those who debate here are never really interested in the kind of introspective analysis that such arguments require. More or less, IMO, they are largely just interested in reassuring themselves about their views by engaging in certain common anti-theistic narratives. The people you're really serving is tha vast majority that simply come here and read. Roding @84: In a recent post I described just such a case. Many people want to believe in god, but lack an intellectually satisfying way of approaching such a belief rationally. While I became a theist because I realized that I wanted to believe in god, I had no idea theism could be so intellectually satisfying. I mean, we hold all the actual cards - free will, objective morality, design, intention, consciousness. All they have is blind chance operating through patterns of behavior they cannot begin to account for. Our arguments, conscience and actions are those of intentional, supernatural beings with will and mind that supercedes the random fluctuations of chemistry; their words and actions might as well be the happenstance rustling of leaves, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. One wonders why such pitiful biological automatons bother making noises with their mouths at all when none of it can be counted on to have any valid meaning whatsoever.William J Murray
September 7, 2016
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roding @84 Yours is an interesting comment, thank you. You mention the word 'theist' so many times that I looked it up online and it seems like it means much and nothing at the same time. :) Aren't the words 'theist' and 'believer' kind of vague? Don't most people (should I say all?) believe in something? My faith in Christ did not come from reading about any cosmological argument or from having any personal, emotional, spiritual crisis. I believe Christ Himself graciously gave it to me. I was lost but now I'm found. I was blind, but now I see. I didn't do anything to deserve any credits for having my faith. It's a mystery. It's called "Grace". Amazing Grace. I just say: hallelujah! And rejoice. However, since He is transforming me from a self-centered sinner into one who wants to love Him with all my strength and love my neighbors as myself, now I suffer for the spiritually lost people and pray that God will touch them too, if it is according to His will and for His glory. That transformation is far from over. The old 'me' still pops up every now and then, but the Holy Spirit takes the 'fun' out of sinning. :)Dionisio
September 7, 2016
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This is an interesting discussion. I am curious though as to how effective the cosmological argument is in actually persuading and changing minds? I wonder how many theists have become so because they have found the cosmological argument compelling? My own (very limited and anecdotal experience) with theists I personally know, is that for most of them at least, they are believers not because of arguments like this, but through other avenues - often related to personal, emotional, or spiritual crises in their own lives. So is it possible then that, although the cosmological argument may be useful to bolster the faith of existing theists, it has little value in trying to win other non-theists? Or is there evidence that people have become theists because of the merits of this argument? Curious to know of any experiences of the theists here who have come to faith through this means.roding
September 7, 2016
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KF @82 Thank you for the information.Dionisio
September 7, 2016
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D, to go into restricted areas, different degrees of permit are required. Some areas, only research scientists through the MVO. Others, are actually a tourism product under development -- a modern Pompeii. You need drivers and vehicles able to handle the terrain, which has been devastated by volcanic activities and by weather in contexts where there is no longer steady maintenance. There are capable tour guides, and Salem Police Station keeps the control on access. One of the hazards is that rain in the mountains can lead to sudden torrents of water and mud in the Belham Valley, and some years ago there was a case of a vehicle caught in a flood. KF PS: I am trying to provoke thought on moving ahead with a new wave of technology driven transformation. Jakubowski's work impresses me as does the mechatronics paradigm.kairosfocus
September 7, 2016
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Pindi: I actually find the idea of an uncaused first cause incoherent.
Your argument seems to be: everything has a cause, including the First Cause. The problem with your argument is the logical order of this philosophical inquiry. At step one we notice that the concept “everything has a cause” implies an actual infinite, which is found to be incoherent. This finding, subsequently, leads us to the idea of the First Cause in order to solve this incoherency. That is the logical order of this philosophical inquiry. First we discover that “everything has a cause” is incoherent and therefore false. Second we propose the existence of the First Cause to untangle the incoherency. In response it doesn’t make sense, as you do, to object to the concept of a First Cause on the basis of “everything has a cause”, which has shown to be false at step one.Origenes
September 7, 2016
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KF @78: Thank you for your comment. I see you're quite busy working on interesting projects. I like the article "Sci-Tech watch, 31: Mechatronics, the Raspberry Pi (Java, too) and education for development" Really interesting. Still have a trip to Monserrat (via Antigua) in my "wish list" but other less desirable activities keep getting in the way and pushing back the more pleasant Caribbean traveling. BTW, would my relatives and I need a special permit to visit the southern part of the island? Again, thank you for all your writing here. Ignore the barking you may hear coming from the sidelines. That could be an indirect (implicit) compliment. Apocalypse 22:21Dionisio
September 7, 2016
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"From current discussions I think they do not want to swallow the concept of a necessary being, which cuts cross-grain to their preferred picture of the world." On the nose KF.
I want atheism to be true and am made uneasy by the fact that some of the most intelligent and well-informed people I know are religious believers. It isn’t just that I don’t believe in God and, naturally, hope that I’m right in my belief. It’s that I hope there is no God! I don’t want there to be a God; I don’t want the universe to be like that.
-Thomas Nagel, Evolutionary Naturalism and the Fear of Religion. (emphasis mine)bb
September 7, 2016
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D, in my view, the "Are You okay?" in 1946 from Pindi is loaded with insinuations. Your counter-questions were appropriate and seemingly lie unanswered. I suggest that you have taken time to provide a trove of documentation on many ID-linked phenomena, and that provides a base of reference that is important. These days, for a time, I am having to go back of the basics of the rather simple and patently robust but often hotly disputed inductive inference that grounds design as a conclusion on relevant signs, to background, worldview roots issues. I would be doing more but I am busy locally and regionally, e.g. cf here: http://kairosfocus.blogspot.com/2016/09/sci-tech-watch-31-mechatronics.html . KFkairosfocus
September 7, 2016
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WJM, From current discussions I think they do not want to swallow the concept of a necessary being, which cuts cross-grain to their preferred picture of the world. But try to imagine a world in which two-ness does not exist and its concomitant A vs NOT-A, or in which such has a beginning or such comes to an end. Two-ness is embedded in the frame for anything to exist, i.e. for any possible world. And from non-being nothing can come so if there ever were utter non-being, such would forever obtain. If a world now is, SOMETHING always was, the issue is of what nature. Infinite successive regress is absurd, something from nothing is absurd. We live in a world with a sufficient first cause, and we do so as responsibly free and rationally free, morally governed beings. Or else, even discussion as we are having would be impossible and pointless, just meaningless noise. The conscience within urging us to the truth and the right and to duty, is indeed the Lord's candle within, enlightening our whole inner life and our understanding of the world. If, we will but listen. If. KFkairosfocus
September 7, 2016
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KF, WJM, harry, Yours are all very insightful comments with many good points -in addition to a rich English vocabulary (specially KF's posts) that provide free benefits for anyone like me whose first language is not English but try to learn it better. Thank you. All that said, let me confess publicly that the interlocutors who don't seem interested in understanding what is being discussed, but nevertheless are so stubbornly opinionated, make me sad, because they seem to be in a hopeless situation which has no known natural remedy, but they're not aware of it. Just look at the way they react to even simple questions posted @1949-1954 in the thread pointed to by this link: https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/mystery-at-the-heart-of-life/#comment-616302 Different interlocutors have behaved similarly in previous threads. It seems like a pattern, unrelated to the educational level. Professor L.M. of the U. Of T. in Canada, reacted to simple questions in a very immature way, saying that I don't ask honest questions (whatever that means). Really sad. What do you think about this?Dionisio
September 7, 2016
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Harry and WJM, first steps in straight thinking 101: a -- basic logical "straight" thinking, b -- dealing with juggernaut spin/ dominant narrative message tactics. KF PS: Some need to realise that to lie is to speak in disregard to duties of care to truth, in hope of profiting from what is said or suggested being taken as true. By contrast -- following Ari in Metaphysics 1011b, truth says of what is, that it is; and of what is not, that it is not.kairosfocus
September 7, 2016
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WJM @ 73, Right. And the ones that "just say oppositional stuff" with enough "chutzpah" earn the title "New Atheist" and make lots of money selling books. Or even become the President of the United States, assuring voters they are Christians while being blatantly hostile to Christianity in all their policies -- which doesn't say much for the critical thinking skills of a lot of Americans.harry
September 7, 2016
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IMO, it falls under the "say anything" mode where one will just put words together to deny something. Perhaps we can call it something like a Clinton Word Shield. If we say "the fact that there cannot be any 4-sided triangles is evidence of God", then the auto-response from atheists would be "4-sided triangles might exist. There's no reason to think they do not," or "the idea that triangles can only have 3 sides is incoherent to me". Or: "I don't know what that "c" stood for." Or: "I gave you all the work-related emails." Or: "Depends on what your definition of "is" is." Or: "There's nothing to suggest an intellect fine-tuned the parameters of the universe." You know - just say oppositional stuff, even if it makes no sense and contradicts all available evidence and experience.William J Murray
September 7, 2016
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WJM, sadly, that is exactly what many now try to argue [complete with pretty abstruse math that in my considered view fails to address adequately the implications of endlessness of succession], as the notion of non-being generating a cosmos out of a non existent hat blew up hilariously. I repeat, you cannot successfully traverse endlessness in successive finite stage causally connected steps, as ate every point you will have onward endlessness still un-traversed. Taking the endless succession 0, 1, 2 etc, and punching it on aligned pink and a blue tapes, advance the pink one -- sh-right k x (+1)-steps -- so it starts at some large finite k on the blue. k, k+1, k+2 etc 1:1 corresponds with 0,1,2 etc, thus endlessness is still yet ahead. This applies ascending and descending. Imagine a ladder of infinite extension from the ground up into the sky. You cannot ascend to end the endlessness in successive steps up the rungs, and you cannot descend to the ground in similarly successive finite steps from the transfinitely far zone. A potentially infinite and divergent process will not complete in finite stage steps at any point in achieved succession from 0, we can always count on from any k to k+1 etc. But doubtlessly, on track record, there will be all sorts of debates on technicalities that will try to duck around this fundamentally simple point. KFkairosfocus
September 7, 2016
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Pindi and Seversky, Are the two of you actually claiming that a chain of cause and effect events can exist without having a beginning, and that is is a logically coherent position to hold?William J Murray
September 7, 2016
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Pindi said:
I actually find the idea of an uncaused first cause incoherent.
Really? You operate every second of your conscious existence as if your choices and behavioral will is uncaused by physical forces (meaning, as if you are not a biological automaton), yet you find the idea of an uncaused cause incoherent? Do you hold people responsible for their actions? If so, why - their behavior is just the inevitable result of billions of years of accumulated physical forces acting on matter. They can no more help what they do than a rock can stop itself from rolling down a hill. If you found the idea of an uncaused cause incoherent, you wouldn't be able to hold people responsible for actions simply caused by the natural progression of physical forces acting on matter.
Origines, my argument remains the same whether you call it God or not. If you believe everything must have a cause, on what basis do you exempt the first cause? You just define it to suit your own needs.
Try and pay attention, Pindi. You seem to be immune to understanding something very easy to understand; no one here believes that "everything must have a cause", so please stop using that straw man to make an irrelevant point. What people here are saying is that for the system of cause and effect to make any sense, every effect must have a cause. That is not the same as saying that "everything must have a cause". Also, if every effect must have a cause, then to avoid the logical absurdity of infinite causal regress or having effects with no cause, we must logically postulate at least one uncaused cause, or a cause that is not also an effect of something else. This is not rocket science or advanced logic - it's common sense. To start a chain of cause and effect events, something uncaused must logically stand at the beginning of that chain that causes the first effect. That's not a special case pleading or convenient definition, that's pointing out the logically, common-sense obvious. What is actually incomprehensible to the point of absurdity is postulating a chain of cause and effect events with no beginning. I mean, whaaaaat? You find that coherent, and a beginning to a cause and effect sequence incoherent? C'mon, man!William J Murray
September 7, 2016
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Seversky said @6:
It’s very simple. It’s no canard. If you want to nitpick, there is evidence that people believe a God exists. That is evidence of belief only. It’s not evidence for the existence of God.
Seversky said @65:
I don’t deny there can be evidence for a hypothesis of God but there are those of us who find the evidence adduced for that hypothesis by believers as less than compelling.
I can't quite reconcile these two statements. Is there no evidence for the existence of god, or is the evidence that some people point to something you personally find "less than compelling"?
There is nothing in the mystery to suggest intentionality in spite of Hoyle’s – and others – sense that the whole thing looks “rigged”
If there is nothing to suggest it, why then did Hoyle and others see the evidence exactly that way? Why did that evidence convince atheist Anthony Flew that atheism was wrong? Don't you think that it is just slightly hyperbolic and ideologically obstinant to assert that there is nothing in the fine-tuning evidence that would suggest that the constants and forces of the universe had be purposefully set by a superintellect? I mean, if there is nothign to suggest it, why invoke a multiverse to account for that fine-tuning? Why did Hawking essentially write a book expressly to hypothesize a means of getting that fine-tuning without an intentional agency if there was nothing in the evidence that even suggested an intentional agency in the first place? Stephen Hawking said:
The discovery recently of the extreme fine-tuning of so many laws of nature could lead some to the idea that this grand design has a Grand Designer…True, the laws of the universe seem tailor made for humans.” Many improbable occurrences conspire to create Earth’s human friendly design… We need liquid water to exist, and if the earth were too close (to the sun) it would all but boil off; if it is too far it would freeze…(or) even a small disturbance in gravity…would send the planet off it’s orbit and cause it to spiral into or away from the sun.” It is not only the peculiar characteristics of our solar system that seems oddly conducive to the development of human life, but also the characteristics of our entire universe-and its laws. They appear to have a design that is both tailor made to support us and if we are to exist, leaves little room for alteration…The forces of nature had to be such that heavier elements- especially carbon could be produced and remain stable…Even that is not enough: The dynamics of the stars had to be such that some would eventually explode, precisely in a way that could disperse the heavier elements through space.” (At the atomic level) if protons were just 0.2% heavier, they would decay into neutrons, destabilizing atoms, again of course making all life impossible…(So) most of the…laws of nature appear fine tuned in the sense that if they were altered by only modest amount, the universe would be…unsuitable for the development of life…The laws of nature form a system that is extremely fine tuned.”
And it is your contention that Hawking is what, seeing indications where none exist to suggest deliberate fine-tuning to a reasonable person, and so his book was a waste of time because there was nothing there in the first place that warranted some kind of explanation? In the words of the ESPN football analysts: "C'mon, man!"William J Murray
September 7, 2016
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Pindi @67, Please, do yourself a big favor and refrain from imagining you're the only person reading the comments posted in this blog. Have you ever seen the terms 'onlookers' or 'lurkers' or 'anonymous visitors' mentioned in this blog? You have revealed your own real motives in this blog and that's what my simple questions were precisely intended for: to let you reveal publicly your real motives. The way someone reacts to simple questions is very revealing. As your comrade rvb8 declared in one of his comments*, he wants to "level the playing field", whatever that means. Your comments show little interest in serious discussions, where understanding each other's point of view, without having to agree, is very important for a productive debate. BTW, before I conclude this comment, let me tell everyone reading this that you’ve failed to answer the simple questions posted @1949-1954 in the thread pointed to by this link: https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/mystery-at-the-heart-of-life/#comment-616302 (*) rvb8 @34 here: https://uncommondescent.com/ethics/science-worldview-issues-and-society/where-do-you-get-the-notion-there-likely-have-been-800-million-abortions-in-40-years-from/#comment-616454Dionisio
September 7, 2016
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Dionisio, of course you can repeat the same thing as many times as you want. Seems a little pointless to me, but hey, whatever rocks your boat.Pindi
September 6, 2016
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