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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
Pindi @58:
Dionisio, I choose what I want to respond to, based on time available and how interesting the subject is to me. I don’t accept any obligation to continue any conversation I become part of. I do this out of interest and enjoyment, not as a job or obligation.
That's fine. We all here choose what we want to respond to, what we want to ask, how many times we want to respond, how many times we want to repeat the questions. That's why I can say -as many times as I want- this:
Remember 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
Dionisio
September 6, 2016
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drc466 @ 55
Seversky, Your main point seems to be that unexplainable events do not qualify as “evidence for God”. Let me ask you a question by analogy, then, and then construct a logical argument against you from there. Surely you have heard of “cargo cults”. Imagine you are a native on a remote island who discovers, one day, an empty Coke bottle. You know that creation of this object exceeds any capability possessed by you or your tribe, or explanation by any natural process you have knowledge of. You have, essentially, no knowledge whatsoever of this object. Question: Does this Coke bottle provide “evidence” of anything? Can you, as a native, deduce anything at all from the existence of this Coke bottle? If you answer “Yes”, then the unexplainable CAN function as evidence. If you answer “No”, I would question your understanding of science and the scientific method.
This is just another variant of Paley's Watch. If I had never seen a Coke bottle before, I would most probably judge it to be artificial because such a thing had never been observed to occur naturally and was made of something I had never seen before and did not occur naturally to my knowledge. The bottle itself would be an item of data but, if I inferred that somewhere out there was a more scientifically and technologically advanced culture capable of creating such things then the bottle would become evidence for that hypothesis. I could also infer that the bottle was the product of some natural process which none of the tribe had ever seen before. There would be no way to decide between them on the basis of the bottle alone. Evidence is not proof.
Ergo, there CAN be evidence for the existence of God: Any observable object or event that is mathematically calculable as “impossible” to be natural, or exceeds scientific limits of what natural laws are capable of producing, must be considered evidence for the existence of God.
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. There might be some sort of intelligent agency behind everything but have you considered that, if there is, it need not be the Christian God nor any of the other gods that human beings have worshipped at one time or another?Seversky
September 6, 2016
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Pindi @58:
I’m sorry, I don’t have time for in depth responses this week.
Of course! You respond if you want to and whenever you want to. It's completely up to you.Dionisio
September 6, 2016
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seversky
What brought our universe into existence might have been some sort of intelligent agency. We can’t rule it out but neither can we rule it in. There is nothing in the mystery to suggest intentionality in spite of Hoyle’s – and others – sense that the whole thing looks “rigged”
Intentionality is the only possibility. The universe is contingent; it did not have to exist. Whatever brought it into existence had to have the volitional power to make the decision----create or not create. Only an intelligent agent can make decisions.StephenB
September 6, 2016
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Seversky @ 61,
What brought our universe into existence might have been some sort of intelligent agency.
See my post @3. If there is one chance in 10^10^123 that something might have happened mindlessly and accidentally, then rationality demands that we assume it happened via intelligent agency.harry
September 6, 2016
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harry @ 54
So, everything that we can determine exists is natural. Fine. We have determined that some “natural” reality existed prior to space, time, matter and energy, and must have brought them into being. That “natural” reality appears to have intentionally done this in a way that the more we studied that which was brought into being, the more evident it would be that this preexisting “natural” reality existed, and did what it did for a purpose.
What brought our universe into existence might have been some sort of intelligent agency. We can't rule it out but neither can we rule it in. There is nothing in the mystery to suggest intentionality in spite of Hoyle's - and others - sense that the whole thing looks "rigged"Seversky
September 6, 2016
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groovamos @ 48
Seversky: I agree that something must have existed before this universe. I wouldn’t call it “supernatural” Well then in your mind you have placed the universe generator in a peer relationship with the universe as I have indicated you might, in the post @ 41. You have also refuted the multiverse, because a multiverse would be logically be superior to the universe (which itself contains all of nature). As a materialist you then assume the generator and the universe are both unconscious, though your own conscious existence refutes it even from a materialist perspective in the case of the latter (from a dualist perspective also for the previous)
I don't know what preceded this universe and neither does anyone else. That's the honest answer. Science has conjectures or speculations but that's all. Christians want it to be their God, they believe it to be their God. Maybe it is their God but that desire and belief doesn't make it so. As I understand it - which isn't very well - the multiverse is one tentative solution to certain problems in physics and cosmology. I don't know what you mean by it being logically superior to the universe. Yes, our universe contains all of its nature. Presumably, if there are other universes they will contain all of their natures. Those natures may be different from ours but would they be any the less natural?
because that word carries a lot of baggage that I don’t accept. There is no scientific or formal definition of “baggage” as you use it, so I can presume you mean ‘baggage’ in the common pop psychology or slang psychology definition, as reference to your own psychology as I was intimating @ 41.
I mean by "baggage" that the word "supernatural" carries connotations of being above and beyond nature and therefore not nature. In my view, that's a meaningless concept as everything that exists has nature or, as the entry from the Stanford Encylopedia of Philosophy puts it "reality is exhausted by nature, containing nothing “supernatural”, and that the scientific method should be used to investigate all areas of reality, including the “human spirit”Seversky
September 6, 2016
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Pindi
I actually find the idea of an uncaused first cause incoherent. 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.
The caboose, which cannot cause its own movement, is pulled by the cattle car, which is pulled by the box car, which is pulled by the freight car, which is pulled by the passenger car, which is pulled by the engine--which is not pulled by anything. It is the first puller; it pulls everything else. It is the un-pulled puller. In like fashion, the first cause must be uncaused. If you find that idea incoherent, then the problem is not with the idea--it is with you.StephenB
September 6, 2016
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I'm sorry, I don't have time for in depth responses this week. Dionisio, I choose what I want to respond to, based on time available and how interesting the subject is to me. I don't accept any obligation to continue any conversation I become part of. I do this out of interest and enjoyment, not as a job or obligation. Most of the time I don't find you very interesting. If that doesn't work for you, that's fine, let's not interact. HeKS and others. Maybe the universe has never not existed. It could be eternal. There might be a beginningless and endless series of big bangs. Who knows? If that offends logic, well, the universe has no obligations to meet our requirements of it. I actually find the idea of an uncaused first cause incoherent. 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.Pindi
September 6, 2016
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Ninth, what is more parsimonious, one God or infinite universes? The whirling sound you hear is William of Ockham spinning in his grave every time the multiverse is invoked. The multiverse is, without the slightest doubt, the ultimate example of violating the heuristic, "entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity."Barry Arrington
September 6, 2016
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drc466, I think part of the problem here is that Seversky (and likely others) are attempting to recast positive, evidence-based arguments for God's existence as being merely God-of-the-gaps arguments that claim we don't currently have a natural explanation for certain phenomena, ergo, God-did-it. Of course, this is simply not the case. Based on all the data we currently have available to us and our current understanding of the world and its causal structure, the evidence we've been citing strongly and positively suggests a cause for its existence that matches many of the attributes theists have ascribed to God for thousands of years. This is why an atheist like Fred Hoyle was moved to honestly admit:
"A common sense interpretation of the facts suggests that a superintellect has monkeyed with physics, as well as with chemistry and biology, and that there are no blind forces worth speaking about in nature. The numbers one calculates from the facts seem to me so overwhelming as to put this conclusion almost beyond question."
It also caused Hoyle to admit that his atheism was "greatly shaken" by these kinds of scientific findings. Compare Hoyle's admissions to the kind of fatuous claims made by Seversky in this thread that these kinds of scientific findings and the lines of evidence mentioned have no connection whatsoever to the question of God's existence and cannot be legitimately counted as evidence in its favor, except perhaps by "those who practice unquestioning credulity". Seversky's objections are transparently trivial. Now, one might ask whether the fine-tuning of the universe, if it counts as evidence for God's existence, might also count as evidence for the multiverse, since both proposed explanatory entities are or were external to our universe and lack independent observational confirmation of their existence. The answer to this question is, yes, it does count as evidence for the multiverse, but only very weakly. Why only weakly? Well, there are several reasons. First, whereas our understanding of the details of the Big Bang and the fine-tuning directly suggest a pretty comprehensive description of a cause that matches the classic descriptions of God, they do not in any sense directly suggest a description of the multiverse. On the contrary, and as I've already mentioned, when it comes to the origin of the universe, the attempt to posit a physical multiverse is to essentially ignore the amazing fact that the entire physical reality of our universe seems to have exploded into being in an absolute beginning and to assert that this event was just more of the same, and preceded by more of the same in the tradition of "It's turtles all the way down". Further, with respect to the fine-tuning, the multiverse is a complex mechanistic explanatory entity based on tenuous attempts to join together multiple layers of purely speculative, theoretical and untested physics all for the purpose of imaginatively constructing an entity that is tailor made to explain just the specific finding of the fine-tuning through a mechanistic process, the details of which are derived from the combination of speculative theories rather than directly from the facts of the fine-tuning. Second, with respect to the origin of the universe, a physical superspace from which our universe was birthed would be a temporal entity and so, unlike God, would not provide a terminator to infinite temporal regression, which means it does not eliminate the need for an entity like God. Third, a multiverse is intended to avoid the common sense conclusion of design and teleology that is most obviously suggested by the fine-tuning and it is motivated primarily by an a priori philosophical commitment to "natural" or material causal explanations. An intelligent entity like God, on the other hand, is consistent with the common sense interpretation of the evidence, which makes God a prima facie better explanation in the absence of some defeater. Fourth, as I've mentioned before, the multiverse is an inferior explanation of the fine tuning compared to God in terms of explanatory scope. The multiverse in combination with an observer selection effect might account for the fine-tuning of the universe for life, but this would not explain the even more strict fine-tuning of the universe for discoverability unless we claim that the multiverse accounts for any conceivable state of affairs, in which case we undermine the foundation of science. The multiverse therefore explains either too little or too much. But the various kinds of fine-tuning are all consistent with teleology and with a common sense interpretation of purposeful design by a superintellect, and so they can be explained by God without having to destroy the foundation of science. God also serves as a viable ground for other aspects of reality that the multiverse cannot account for even in principle. Fifth, even if a multiverse existed, there is no guarantee that enough universes would have been produced by now to make a universe like ours more likely than not to have been produced. Sixth, even if we were to allow the possibility of an infinite multiverse, there's actually no guarantee that a life-permitting universe would have been produced unless the mechanism for producing universes were itself fine-tuned to ensure it covered the full spectrum of possible values so as to make a life permitting universe inevitable rather than simply producing the same lifeless universe or some particular set of lifeless universes over and over. The fine-tuning problem is thus simply moved up a level rather than solved. Furthermore, even a finely-tuned universe generating mechanism may not guarantee that even one life-permitting universe will have even a single fine-tuned solar system and planet capable of sustaining life. Seventh, the multiverse is plagued by the Boltzmann Brain problem. Eighth, the multiverse is ad hoc. Theories about the kind of multiverse that could even possibly account for the fine-tuning exist primarily for the purpose of explaining the fine-tuning itself. The same is true for constituent theories like Chaotic Inflation, which were themselves developed in an attempt to account for other forms of cosmic fine-tuning, and as I mentioned earlier, even Andre Linde has admitted that the only reason the multiverse would get any traction as a legitimate theory is out of a need to explain the fine-tuning without reference to theism. On the other hand, the concept of an immaterial and superintelligent creator God who brought the physical universe into being at the beginning of time and made it to be suitable for sustaining intelligent life has been around for thousands of years, and those who believed it were astonished at the precision but not the fact of the fine-tuning of the universe, our solar-system and our planet. And on and on and on it goes. For all these reasons and more, the origin of our physical universe in the finite past and the fine-tuning of our universe and solar system for intelligent life and discoverability serve as very strong evidence for the existence of God, while the fine-tuning for life serves as only very weak evidence for a multiverse.HeKS
September 6, 2016
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Seversky, Your main point seems to be that unexplainable events do not qualify as "evidence for God". Let me ask you a question by analogy, then, and then construct a logical argument against you from there. Surely you have heard of "cargo cults". Imagine you are a native on a remote island who discovers, one day, an empty Coke bottle. You know that creation of this object exceeds any capability possessed by you or your tribe, or explanation by any natural process you have knowledge of. You have, essentially, no knowledge whatsoever of this object. Question: Does this Coke bottle provide "evidence" of anything? Can you, as a native, deduce anything at all from the existence of this Coke bottle? If you answer "Yes", then the unexplainable CAN function as evidence. If you answer "No", I would question your understanding of science and the scientific method. So, taking the next step. Having established that the unexplainable CAN qualify as evidence, can that evidence qualify as evidence for "God", or generically, the supernatural? Given that you can mathematically calculate probabilities for natural events, and that you can scientifically delimit what natural laws can produce, the answer would certainly again seem to be "Yes". Ergo, there CAN be evidence for the existence of God: Any observable object or event that is mathematically calculable as "impossible" to be natural, or exceeds scientific limits of what natural laws are capable of producing, must be considered evidence for the existence of God. For which HeKS provides a handy list. Edit for clarification: In this context, "unexplainable" simply means something that is not clearly describable in terms of current known human capability.drc466
September 6, 2016
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Seversky @44
If something existed before our universe or outside it now then it will have a “nature” which makes it a natural phenomenon even if we have no access to it. Calling it “supernatural”, in my view, is misleading.
So, everything that we can determine exists is natural. Fine. We have determined that some "natural" reality existed prior to space, time, matter and energy, and must have brought them into being. That "natural" reality appears to have intentionally done this in a way that the more we studied that which was brought into being, the more evident it would be that this preexisting "natural" reality existed, and did what it did for a purpose. Consider WJM's excellent remarks @52.harry
September 6, 2016
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William J Murray @52, That was excellent.harry
September 6, 2016
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Pindi, The nature of the first cause or sufficient cause arguments is that they logically lead a rational person to the conclusion that there must be an acausal first cause (or an acausal sufficient cause) to serve (logically) as the ground or foundation of our cause-and-effect system. Without it you end up with an absurd scenario of infinite causal regression. So, it is logic that demands an acausal first cause. Something that causes other things to happen but is not itself caused to exist or occur. It puts an end point to causal regression. It would be the origin of all cause-and-effect existence. We can call this ground of existence anything. Let's call it the Causal Prime. Since the Causal Prime generates time, space and cause-and-effect, it would be difficult if not impossible to imagine the nature of what the Causal Prime is, because we generally consider the nature of things by a coordinate system involving time, space, and cause-and-effect relationships. Whatever Causal Prime is, it generates what we call "nature", or the way things behave in the universe, which we refer to as natural laws and forces. There is no known reason why there should be natural laws or forces at all, nor any known reason why natural laws and forces should behave consistently and predictably. Further, there is no known reason why the particular formulation of space, time, and cause-and-effect via consistent, predictable natural laws and forces should be "tuned" in a fashion where a long-lasting, stable universe capable of generating and sustaining life, let alone intelligent life, would be remotely possible. In fact, we don't know what it is that makes things act the way they do. We call the behavior "gravity" or "entropy" or "inertia", but there is still no reason why things should behave in that way at all, much less according to mathematical, predictable precision. You might compare such things to CGI movies where things appear to behave because of cause-and-effect physical forces and laws, but really only act that way because on-screen behaviors are generated according to programmed rules. So, Causal Prime not only generates space, time and causal sequences, but necessarily also generates the rules of causal sequences and how they occur in space-time, what we call natural laws and forces. Whatever Causal Prime is, it has produced an extremely unlikely universe with extremely fine-tuned behaviors capable of supporting inhabitants so preposterously unlikely (conscious, self-aware intelligent life) that their existence can only be considered a miraculous anomaly sitting on a stack of prior miraculous anomalies. This, along with other arguments about the nature and logical ground of morality and free will, can draw one to rationally reach a conclusion about the Prime Cause; that whatever it is, it purposefully generated this particular universe with its highly particular characteristics in order to support the existence of some highly improbable inhabitants for some reason or purpose. Which would lead to a more proper designation of the Prime Cause as "God".William J Murray
September 6, 2016
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Pindi @46,
I assume you believe the first cause was God.
Not so fast. Logic informs us about several properties of the First Cause. But I want you to list them. In another thread you said:
And yes I really do think about a lot of these things. Deeply.
So, let's hear it.
On what basis do you excuse God the First Cause from the requirement of being caused? [my insert]
The First Cause has by definition no external cause.
And if God was not caused, does that not mean he/she/it has always existed, thereby offending your prohibition against infinities?
No, the First Cause has no external context — like space and time —, which means that it is "not in time and space". The First Cause can neither be understood in a causal context nor in a space time context. Saying that the First Cause is "infinite" or "always existed", are incoherent attempts to understand the First Cause in the context of space time. I hold it to be much more precise to state that the First Cause is 'not in time and space.'Origenes
September 6, 2016
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Pindi @35: Considering what HeKS wrote @28, it seems like you're (finally!) starting to learn a lesson or two from HeKS. Well, it was about time, wasn't it? :) Here's a copy of part of what HeKS wrote @28 (addressed to Pindi):
I have to say, this is your first comment in our recent exchanges that comes across to me as though you are actually trying to think honestly about these issues rather than simply falling back on a tired atheism-affirming narrative. That is intended as a complement even if it sounds somewhat back-handed, as I’ve been up-front about my criticisms on this point.
Why did your comments prior to the one HeKS referred to @28 came across as though you were NOT trying to think honestly? Did other folks in this blog get similar impressions from your comments? PS. Please, don’t forget to read the comment @47 and do something about it. It will be very appreciated. [emphasis mine]Dionisio
September 5, 2016
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Pindi @35, Many folks here (including myself) can learn from reading HeKS' insightful comments. He's a very good writer. I lack his writing skills. Well, really I don't have any writing skills. Can you learn from HeKS OPs and comments too? Please, don't forget to read the comment @47 and do something about it. It will be very appreciated.Dionisio
September 5, 2016
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Seversky: I agree that something must have existed before this universe. I wouldn’t call it “supernatural” Well then in your mind you have placed the universe generator in a peer relationship with the universe as I have indicated you might, in the post @ 41. You have also refuted the multiverse, because a multiverse would be logically be superior to the universe (which itself contains all of nature). As a materialist you then assume the generator and the universe are both unconscious, though your own conscious existence refutes it even from a materialist perspective in the case of the latter (from a dualist perspective also for the previous). because that word carries a lot of baggage that I don’t accept. There is no scientific or formal definition of "baggage" as you use it, so I can presume you mean 'baggage' in the common pop psychology or slang psychology definition, as reference to your own psychology as I was intimating @ 41. So with that we can establish that your materialist philosophy has an etiology based in your own psychology.groovamos
September 5, 2016
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Pindi @35, Remember 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 Why is it taking you so long to answer those simple questions? Are you ok? Need help? What are you waiting for? Why did you quit the conversation you started? Did you realize that your initial comment was wrong, but didn't want to admit it publicly? Or was it another reason? Just trying to guess it. Can you clarify that here? Thank you.Dionisio
September 5, 2016
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Origenes, I agree that is a conundrum. I assume you believe the first cause was God. On what basis do you excuse God from the requirement of being caused? And if God was not caused, does that not mean he/she/it has always existed, thereby offending your prohibition against infinities?Pindi
September 5, 2016
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Harry, I see you find it hard to debate without childish taunts. What do you believe "preceded" the current space/time we live in?Pindi
September 5, 2016
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harry @ 32
Since Pindi has cluttered up this thread with inane comments, you might not have noticed my reply @19 to your post @17. Do you agree that some supernatural reality must have existed before spacetime and the natural realities within it existed?
I agree that something must have existed before this universe. I wouldn't call it "supernatural" because that word carries a lot of baggage that I don't accept. I can expand on that a little by quoting from another comment I posted in a different thread:
The problem for all such arguments lies in the lack of an accepted operational definition of "naturalism" and, by extension, "methodological naturalism. I think many of us are familiar with the opening paragraphs of the entry on "naturalism" in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
The term “naturalism” has no very precise meaning in contemporary philosophy. Its current usage derives from debates in America in the first half of the last century. The self-proclaimed “naturalists” from that period included John Dewey, Ernest Nagel, Sidney Hook and Roy Wood Sellars. These philosophers aimed to ally philosophy more closely with science. They urged that reality is exhausted by nature, containing nothing “supernatural”, and that the scientific method should be used to investigate all areas of reality, including the “human spirit” (Krikorian 1944; Kim 2003). So understood, “naturalism” is not a particularly informative term as applied to contemporary philosophers. The great majority of contemporary philosophers would happily accept naturalism as just characterized—that is, they would both reject “supernatural” entities, and allow that science is a possible route (if not necessarily the only one) to important truths about the “human spirit”
If you say that science is limited to the investigation of those phenomena that can be observed, however indirectly, or which can be inferred from such observation then I would agree. I would then ask, in what way is that a limitation? What else is there? Isn't the "supernatural" an empty set? Ghosts, for example, are popularly thought to be a supernatural phenomenon. But if such entities exist in objective reality, if they have a nature which can be observed and described, however elusive they might be, then how are they not a natural phenomenon? The same would also be true of any putative deity. On the other hand, if you assume that the set of supernatural phenomena includes those that are forever inaccessible to scientific investigation, such that we cannot know if they even exist, then how does that provide any explanatory purchase in the natural world? Take, for example, the case of epileptic seizures. Two explanations are proposed. The first argues that they are the effect of misfiring brain cells, the second claims that they are a sign of demonic possession. In the first case, we can observe the physical brain and the neurons of which it is partially composed and look for any abnormal activity that might be associated with the seizures. In the second case, if we cannot have any knowledge of the existence of demons, of their nature, of how they might "possess" a human being and influence their behavior then of what possible use is it as an explanation, let alone a scientific explanation?
If something existed before our universe or outside it now then it will have a "nature" which makes it a natural phenomenon even if we have no access to it. Calling it "supernatural", in my view, is misleading.Seversky
September 5, 2016
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pindi @39
If you read some cosmology books, you would find there are many theories about what may have preceded the big bang.
Right, but before spacetime exists there really isn't room for any matter in the absence of space, and if somehow the impossible happened and some matter existed without any space in which to exist, nothing could have happened -- ever -- because change takes time and there wasn't any yet. So, sure, people can theorize about what was happening pre-spacetime, and they can theorize about bajillions of other universes and flying spaghetti monsters and all kinds of things. When you are done reading about all that, you might enjoy Grimm's Fairy Tales, or a new book I heard was coming out, Impossibilities for Atheists to Pretend Actually Happened, to Make Them Feel Better.harry
September 5, 2016
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Pindi: If you read some cosmology books, you would find there are many theories about what may have preceded the big bang.
For me the core argument is the First Cause argument. Arguendo, I'm willing to accept that there is a natural cause X for the Big Bang. But what natural cause is there for X? And what caused that ... and so forth. If we agree that an actual infinite cannot exist, then we can skip your evasionary tactics and discuss the properties of the First Cause. What are your thoughts on this matter?
Seversky: We all agree that you cannot get something from nothing. If there had ever been truly nothing, there would still be nothing.
Same question for Seversky, what are your thoughts on the First Cause?Origenes
September 5, 2016
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Seversky: We all agree that you cannot get something from nothing. If there had ever been truly nothing, there would still be nothing. Yes, thank you for making the point. You cannot get a universe from nothing, the universe requires a universe generator. Your problem in supporting naturalism is to prove the universe generator to have a peer relationship with the universe, in that it cannot have a superior status to the universe. Or alternatively, if it happens to be the 'multiverse', it can be superior but it cannot be smart, it must be dumb. And of course in this case, the inferior, the universe, must be also be dumb, but just happens to harbor "bright" beings that consider it such. So really, this is the core of your life philosophy: There may be a universe generator in your life, but you must not allow it to be smart, or even conscious. This is your philosophy, but you cannot even explain why you think it has to be true. So the rest of us on here will step up to the plate for you and maybe discuss the real reason you think your philosophy true, and it would have to be your personal psychology requires it true in your mind. You cannot EVEN entertain the possiblity that the universe generator is conscious. And you think yourself highly rational because of this belief, so the rest of us can laugh at the irrationality and basis-free thinking on display. And get this: if the universe generator is dumb, materialists would seem to not have a problem with its origins. Only if it were smart do materialists raise the question "where did it come from". Wow what mind boggling logic, like we're really afraid of being smoked in the debates by you guys.groovamos
September 5, 2016
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J-Mac, same for you. What you are saying is a fact is merely your assertion. I imagine you believe you know how life originated and are not interested in discussing other views on the subject.Pindi
September 5, 2016
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Harry @38,that is simply your assertion. If you read some cosmology books, you would find there are many theories about what may have preceded the big bang.Pindi
September 5, 2016
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Pindi @21, 35,
Why would something that existed before our universe have to be not natural?
Natural realities exist in space and time, which had a beginning. Before there was space and time there were no natural realities. Space, time, matter and energy -- natural realities -- didn't pop into existence from nothingness. They must have been brought into being by a supernatural reality,harry
September 5, 2016
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Pindi, You are wasting my time! Why didn't you say you had no idea how life originated and you chose one of the ideas? I know for a fact that life could not have originated on its own; by accident and I don't need to waste time with you telling me what I already know.J-Mac
September 5, 2016
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