The fine-tuning argument for God's existence

When did I call myself a good person? I'm a selfish jerk. I could be spooning right now, instead I'm arguing on the Internet. At least I own the hurt that I cause others, instead of feeling safe that it'll all be sorted out in the afterlife. I'd say the inconvenient truth is there's no higher power to sort out the unbearable injustice we experience, our hope is a few billion stupid screw-ups on an insignificant mote of dust in an uncaring universe that resides in some vast unknowable realm. That's what we gotta work with.

Thank you for this post. At least it describes state of affairs on the other side of the isle honestly. And I am not sure which meaning of "spooning" did you sacrifice to argue over internet? If you mean the form of affection between couples -- there is nothing selfish about it :p. Especially compared to spooning ice cream. Or at least it is the least selfish form of physical protest against reality that pain is mostly uninvited while pleasure requires dedicated effort.
 
What is the purpose of proving that God created the Big bang?

This is one of the reasons that I reject the recent attempts to re-define the nature of God by believers in response to advances in science. Better to say...OK, God is still who we thought he was, the powerful being who performed miracles, grants prayers and watches over us from some undisclosed location... However, we realize that the 'Creator of the Universe' thing is a bit much, and frankly unnecessary. God could just be an advanced alien observer and still posses all the powers we attribute to God... the meaningful ones anyway.

Trying to shoehorn ... the ten plagues guy who sacrificed himself/his son to teach us the ultimate lesson in love etc, and resides here on Earth watching over us ... into... some extra-dimensional, abstraction that exists outside reality so he can "cause" the Big Bang ... just strips all the meaning and value from the whole concept of God.

And I suspect that continuing to "move the goalpost" with respect to where God is comes from a desire to justify imposing a particular religion on everyone else. After all, as long as we can convincingly assert that God is the "creator" or "originator" or "inventor" of the entire universe, then we can extend that to mean that by implication, God is the "owner" of the universe and everything in it. Then here comes all the "rules that God wants us to live by" which we clearly must obey because we are all just tenants in "His" universe.

But if God is just an advanced alien observer that we misinterpreted to be the creator of the universe then the so-called divine authority of all the religions fades away, and we are left with pure cost-benefit analysis with regard to any particular religion.

So this is my question with respect to the "Fine-Tuning" issue. What purpose is there in proving that a God-entity created or caused the Big bang (or however you define the beginning of the universe)? Is it to show that God "owns" the Universe? Any other reason?
 
I am still not getting how the Bible was written as a religious manifesto.

Did I say that it was? It doesn't matter to my explanation at all, either way.

Does my answer satisfy you? Do you understand what my "Good reasons" would be?
 
No, it is the polite way of saying that devil was kicked out of paradise. There is a popular mod for Civ4 called FfH -- Fall from Heaven. Hello?

Er, our society society has incorporated the imagery. But, sure, suppose you're correct, and Shamayim changes meaning mid-chapter, the 'revealed' text sure seems to then be finely tuned to needlessly deceive people regarding natural history. It's awfully hubristic to assume a text that deveived people for thousands of years suddenly gets special meaning for the Baby Boomer and their parents offspring

But, it's still more parsimonious to assume the peoples had conflated the sky with Heaven. It's pressingly tough to find literature support for your conception, where Heaven is an alternative Realm, in the Old Testament. It's why so much of the phrasing includes directionality. It's why they used the same word for both.

And, I dunno, being impressed you can twist and squint to see some truth in Genesis 1:1 merely puts off the next obvious error to verse 11.
 
Well the problem for me, is that when I was growing up, God was presented to me, and I understood God to be, simply an invisible old man, living in the sky who, with his bare hands, created the world and everything in it, along with the sun moon and stars in the sky. "The "universe" and "the world" were the same thing and as I understood it, contained the Earth and all the stuff in the sky... an understandable, childlike, Geocentric view. This view included the notion that God existed within the world as I understood it, in the sky, where he could watch over all of us. God was a person and I was "created in his image" so he was like a man, but just much more powerful. God controlled everything, and knew everything, and saw everything, but still God was in our world, affecting, controlling and influencing things, answering prayers, healing sick people, blessing food etc.

But now, I am being asked to view God as being outside the Universe, the originator of the big bang and consequently no more involved than a person who kicks the ball down a hill and then just lets it roll. To me, this is not God. This is not the God I was raised to believe in. This is just a new concoction, contrived out of necessity because of the inconvenience modern thought poses to the old image and the two images of God cannot be reconciled. God? OK, whatevers. But a God that matters? No.

This is one of the reasons that I reject the recent attempts to re-define the nature of God by believers in response to advances in science.

I don't think anyone's trying to "redefine" God in response to science, at least not in the way you describe. The God you were raised to believe in doesn't sound like the God of traditional monotheism, which is indeed conceived as outside the universe, beyond space and time. Aquinas states that God is not merely eternal but identical with his own eternity. On this view God is not a (single) person at all, and not like human beings, but transcends everything we can understand. This is an abstract conception of God which dates back at least to the Middle Platonism of the second century CE or thereabouts and has still older roots. It's not at all a recent development in response to science. On the contrary, modern theologians have tended to pull away from this older, more abstract, transcendental conception of God to think of him as bound by space and time, mutable, and perhaps less powerful than previously thought.
 
On the contrary, modern theologians have tended to pull away from this older, more abstract, transcendental conception of God to think of him as bound by space and time, mutable, and perhaps less powerful than previously thought.
So you seem to be saying that what I was describing is actually the opposite of what is happening... Theologians are making God smaller (rather than bigger) in response to science. Is that correct?

My next question, is that when you say "modern theologians" are you talking about clergy or college professors? Almost all the theologians I studied under were atheists and so what you are describing makes sense from that perspective. In essence, they are doing what I suggested in my last post... asserting that prior notions of God were too abstract and redefining a smaller more accessible version of God. Is that correct?
 
Unicorny, pretty much everything you say here has already been addressed and refuted. I did so myself in this post, which you almost completely ignored. You haven't acknowledged the criticisms and arguments given there, far less addressed them. I'm going to show you the courtesy you haven't shown me, and engage with what you say here, one last time.

None of my points have been refuted much less addressed, and I'll get to it below.

You make three big errors here. All of them have been pointed out to you repeatedly.

Three big errors according to you? This should be interesting.

The first error is to suppose that the constants in question could have been different. You've given no evidence at all to back this up. The closest you came was posting a video by a physicist who asserted that the constants could have been different (he didn't explain why) before going on to explain why the multiverse hypothesis was the best explanation, which undermined your argument. So again: why do you make this assumption (that the universal constants could have been different)? Again, merely quoting somebody asserting that they could have been different isn't enough.

The first false statement on your behalf. Yes, the constants could have been very different and I have given evidence to back this up as I've posted a video by a renowned physicist who confirms said notion as the mathematical physical model of our universe would perfectly assimilate any different value of any constant.

Didn't explain why? He did. Any changes in any constants would simply comply with the physical model of the universe and the universe would carry on - albeit - having 0 life in it.

Here we go again with the "undermine" false statement. How does said physicist's personal theory (i.e conjecture) to explain the remarkable life-tuning of our universe to support life undermine the fact that the universe is fine-tuned (indisputable fact) or undermine the notion of God? It just makes no sense. Nothing is "undermining" anything unless 100% proven.

Your flawed logic baffles me.

Merely quoting somebody asserting said constants could have been anything is not enough for you? That somebody is a highly renowned physicists and was one of at least three physicists who independently discovered during or around 1970 that the Veneziano dual resonance model of strong interactions could be described by a quantum mechanical model of strings.

On what exact grounds would you doubt his assertion that the physical constants could have take on any random value? What relevant credentials do you hold when it comes to theoretical physics or understanding of the mechanics of our universe?

Therefore, and until you can explicitly provide proof the fact that the constants could not have taken on any random value, Susskind's assertion will stand valid.

The second error is to suppose that, even if these constants could have been different, it was very unlikely that they would have the values they actually do have. You could only make this supposition if you knew that all the possible constants are equally probable. But you don't know this. This is the point that was made to you time and again, including in my post linked to above, and every time you ignored it to assert again and again that the range of possible values is very vast indeed. But that is not the same thing. The range of possible heights I might have had is, I suppose, infinite, or at least very very huge, but that doesn't mean that the probability of being 5'10 is the same as the probability of being 153'2.

Appeal to ignorance. Many theoretical physicists have already calculated the odds of the constants perfectly falling to their presupposed values to permit life in the universe. Whether or not all possible constants exhibit equal probability of change, their range of possible values, is an exercise in futility.

Cosmologist and mathematician Roger Penrose once attempted to calculate the probability that chance allowed the initial state of the universe and its entropy to be exactly 'right' to allow it to still exist now. His answer was 1 chance in 10^10^123, a probability so small as to effectively be zero. Other have come up with similar very large numbers, rendering the notion of said constants falling to life-permitting values essentially zero by chance.

Now you may argue yet again that "we don't know" - but here's my question to you again: on what ground do you have doubt the above probabilities, What relevant credentials do you hold when it comes to theoretical physics or understanding of the mechanics of our universe?

As many mathematicians and physicists have concluded, the probability of said constants is essentially 0, ruling out chance and therefore, begging the question: who or what caused the constants to fall within their life permitting ranges?

The third (and most fundamental) error is to suppose that there's something special about the actual value of the constants. Suppose we accept that there's a gazillion gazillion different possible values that the constants could have taken, and suppose we accept that there's only a one in gazillion gazillion chance that they had the values that they do in fact have. So what? What's so special about these? That they permit life when no other would? Well, first, you can't know that no other values would permit life; and second (and more importantly), what's so special about life? Why would an alternative universe, that didn't contain life but did contain other stuff that our universe doesn't contain, be inferior to ours? Obviously it would be less preferable from our point of view, but what's so special about that?

Yes. There's something very special about the constants falling on a knife's edge to allow life to exist in our universe. Well, being on a knife's edge does not really do it justice - balancing a billion pencils all simultaneously positioned upright on their sharpened points on a smooth glass surface with no vertical supports does not even come close to describing an accuracy of one part in 10^10^123.

Why do you think cosmologists and physics alike have purposed a multitude of different theories to explain the fine-tuning fact? The fine-tuning of our universe is a remarkable feat and very special.

What's so special about having life in our universe? None other the fact that it's been handpicked to be compatible with the conscious and sapient life that observes it. It's no coincidence.

No time to address the rest (and I'm sure there's would be no point in doing so) if you insistently refuse to acknowledge the basics above.
 
Well, it was worth a try Plotinus. You can lead a horse to water...

Very well said. A leading theoretical physicists and the guru of string theory with multiple awards asserts the fact said constants could have been any value - and yet, it's not good enough to a random poster on the internet?

The intellectual dishonesty is on an entirely different level here.
 
Very well said. A leading theoretical physicists and the guru of string theory with multiple awards asserts the fact said constants could have been any value - and yet, it's not good enough to a random poster on the internet?

The intellectual dishonesty is on an entirely different level here.

Nothing in what you have posted has provided any evidence that the constants of our universe - not a universe, our universe - could have held any values other than those they have. That theory allows for other values is meaningless because we know nothing about what lead to the constants in our universe holding their current value, so how can you possibly say that they must be able to hold other values?

And when it comes to intelluctual dishonesty, please go back an read plotinus' long post again - specifically the part when he demonstrates how you have repeatedly and systematically misrepresented pretty much every source you've used in this thread.
 
And when it comes to intelluctual dishonesty, please go back an read plotinus' long post again - specifically the part when he demonstrates how you have repeatedly and systematically misrepresented pretty much every source you've used in this thread.
I must admit, I am also very interested to see a response from Unicorny specifically to that issue.
 
Don't hold your breath, though. I'm keeping my expectations low on both any response, and a response that makes any sense.
 
So you seem to be saying that what I was describing is actually the opposite of what is happening... Theologians are making God smaller (rather than bigger) in response to science. Is that correct?

Yes, except that it's not really in response to science. It's more that they see the God of traditional theism as coming from a flawed concept of what God should be in the first place - unchangeably perfect - whereas God as presented in the Bible is more dynamic and intimately concerned with his creatures.

My next question, is that when you say "modern theologians" are you talking about clergy or college professors? Almost all the theologians I studied under were atheists and so what you are describing makes sense from that perspective. In essence, they are doing what I suggested in my last post... asserting that prior notions of God were too abstract and redefining a smaller more accessible version of God. Is that correct?

I'm thinking of professorial types, certainly. Though many of them would be clergy too.

The first false statement on your behalf. Yes, the constants could have been very different and I have given evidence to back this up as I've posted a video by a renowned physicist who confirms said notion as the mathematical physical model of our universe would perfectly assimilate any different value of any constant.

Didn't explain why? He did. Any changes in any constants would simply comply with the physical model of the universe and the universe would carry on - albeit - having 0 life in it.

Well, that's not really an explanation. It's just an assertion. The best you can say is that alternative values for these constants would have been compatible with the model of the universe that we've got. So we know of no particular reason that forces these constants to have the values they actually have. However, you can't conclude from that that these constants could definitely have been different. This is because our model of the universe is not perfect. Indeed, it's clearly not perfect and not complete, because among other things, it can't explain why these constants have the values they do have! It may be that as our understanding increases and we refine our model, we will see that in fact there are reasons that force these constants to have certain values.

Of course we don't know that. I'm not asserting that the values couldn't have been different. I'm merely saying that you can't assert that they could. If you want to do so then you need to explain why, not merely cite someone else asserting that they could.

Here we go again with the "undermine" false statement. How does said physicist's personal theory (i.e conjecture) to explain the remarkable life-tuning of our universe to support life undermine the fact that the universe is fine-tuned (indisputable fact) or undermine the notion of God? It just makes no sense. Nothing is "undermining" anything unless 100% proven.

Your flawed logic baffles me.

Merely quoting somebody asserting said constants could have been anything is not enough for you? That somebody is a highly renowned physicists and was one of at least three physicists who independently discovered during or around 1970 that the Veneziano dual resonance model of strong interactions could be described by a quantum mechanical model of strings.

On what exact grounds would you doubt his assertion that the physical constants could have take on any random value? What relevant credentials do you hold when it comes to theoretical physics or understanding of the mechanics of our universe?

Therefore, and until you can explicitly provide proof the fact that the constants could not have taken on any random value, Susskind's assertion will stand valid.

It's not about appeal to authority. (If it is, I'll take my stand with Immanuel Kant, the greatest philosopher of modern times, on the cosmological argument against you). The mere fact that Susskind says something doesn't make it so. Personally I'm perfectly willing to suppose that Susskind is right about this - if he doesn't know, who does? - but I've not been told what Susskind's reasoning is behind it. Simply saying "Susskind says it" isn't enough.

You claim to be baffled by my "flawed logic", but there's nothing at all flawed about my logic. I'm just asking what the rationale is for saying you can know that the constants could have had different values. Telling me that someone very clever thinks they could have done doesn't answer this question.

Moreover, however flawed my logic may be, your argument is downright inconsistent. You praise Susskind as "a highly renowned physicists and was one of at least three physicists who independently discovered during or around 1970 that the Veneziano dual resonance model of strong interactions could be described by a quantum mechanical model of strings" - and yet in the same breath you mock his arguments for the multiverse as "conjecture" and "nonsense". I don't understand how you can Appeal to Authority on one matter and reject the same Authority on another matter. To do that, you need to explain what his arguments are and why you agree with some of them and not with others (as I did with Aquinas, for example). Just saying "He's right about this because he's a genius" and "He's wrong about this because it's nonsense" isn't going to convince anyone.

Appeal to ignorance. Many theoretical physicists have already calculated the odds of the constants perfectly falling to their presupposed values to permit life in the universe. Whether or not all possible constants exhibit equal probability of change, their range of possible values, is an exercise in futility.

Cosmologist and mathematician Roger Penrose once attempted to calculate the probability that chance allowed the initial state of the universe and its entropy to be exactly 'right' to allow it to still exist now. His answer was 1 chance in 10^10^123, a probability so small as to effectively be zero. Other have come up with similar very large numbers, rendering the notion of said constants falling to life-permitting values essentially zero by chance.

You accuse me of Appeal to Ignorance, but your reply is just Appeal to Authority. I asked before: how did Penrose calculate this? What's his evidence? What's his argument? Just saying "Penrose says" isn't an answer. You haven't given us any reason at all to think that Penrose is actually right.

What you say here is also inconsistent with your own argument. You say "Whether or not all possible constants exhibit equal probability of change, their range of possible values, is an exercise in futility." Yes, you're probably right about this. How can we possibly know? But your argument presupposes that we can answer this question, i.e. that they do all exhibit equal probability of change. If we don't know this to be the case (or at least have good reason to suppose that it's the case) then your argument cannot get off the ground. So your very argument presupposes that answering this question isn't an exercise in futility.

Now you may argue yet again that "we don't know" - but here's my question to you again: on what ground do you have doubt the above probabilities, What relevant credentials do you hold when it comes to theoretical physics or understanding of the mechanics of our universe?

What, nearly throwing a mug of coffee over Paul Davies doesn't count as a qualification? Well, my answer to this is: I doubt these probabilities because I haven't been given any positive reason whatsoever to think they're true. I can just as easily say back to you: on what ground do you doubt that the actual values of the constants are the only possible ones?

Now note here that our positions are not equivalent. I'm not saying that the actual values of the constants are the only possible ones. I'm not saying that they're most probable ones. I'm not making any assertions at all about the nature of the case. I'm simply saying that we don't know which, if any, of these assertions is true. You, by contrast, are committed to the view that there's a huge range of possible values and they're all equally probable (or, at least, that the actual values were very very improbable). So you're the one making a definite claim about their probability. For your argument to work, you need that definite claim to be substantiated as true, or at least to show that it's very probably true. For me to undermine your argument, I need only to cast reasonable doubt over that claim. Your problem is that you haven't given any positive reasons to believe this claim other than saying that Roger Penrose believes it too.

Yes. There's something very special about the constants falling on a knife's edge to allow life to exist in our universe. Well, being on a knife's edge does not really do it justice - balancing a billion pencils all simultaneously positioned upright on their sharpened points on a smooth glass surface with no vertical supports does not even come close to describing an accuracy of one part in 10^10^123.

Why do you think cosmologists and physics alike have purposed a multitude of different theories to explain the fine-tuning fact? The fine-tuning of our universe is a remarkable feat and very special.

What's so special about having life in our universe? None other the fact that it's been handpicked to be compatible with the conscious and sapient life that observes it. It's no coincidence.

I simply don't see an answer to my objection here, or even an acknowledgement of what it is. Your penultimate sentence literally makes no sense to me.

Why do I think cosmologists and physicists have proposed various theories to explain fine-tuning? Why, because they're not philosophers, of course, and they're not very good at metaphysics! Now I do have some small expertise in that field.

The problem is that your whole argument rests on the assertion that a life-permitting universe is intrinsically more special, more important, and therefore more in need of explanation than a non-life-permitting universe would be. But as I said, you haven't given any reason to think this. You've given reasons to think that a life-permitting universe is very different from a non-life-permitting one, but that's not the same. For all we know, had the various constants been different, the universe could have had all kinds of weird phenomena in it that are impossible as things actually are. What makes life special and those alternative phenomena not special?

No time to address the rest (and I'm sure there's would be no point in doing so) if you insistently refuse to acknowledge the basics above.

Fair enough, but you must at least admit that quoting Kant in support of the cosmological argument was a little bit silly, mustn't you?
 
Yes, except that it's not really in response to science. It's more that they see the God of traditional theism as coming from a flawed concept of what God should be in the first place - unchangeably perfect - whereas God as presented in the Bible is more dynamic and intimately concerned with his creatures.
I agree with this view (not that they need my agreement). However, you sidestepped my question a little bit right? Or maybe I did not articulate it well enough... So going back to the older "Bigger" extra-universal Monotheistic God-concept... the one that that you described earlier and associated with Aquinas' writings... As an aside, I do not see how Aquinas statement you quoted defines God as existing outside of the universe. Can't God and the universe both be simultaneously eternal? Didn't you propose exactly that earlier in this thread?

Please note that I don't want to get sidetracked into whether Aquinas said God was outside the universe, as I am willing to just take you word for it that the extra-universal God is an old, rather than new concept. That sounds reasonable anyway and vaguely familiar...

So in any case, why did that concept emerge? Was it in response to then-modern advances in understandings about the cosmos? Was the church and her proponents trying to establish divine ownership rights in the face of cosmic awareness? I ask obviously, because then my original question is still valid.

I'm thinking of professorial types, certainly. Though many of them would be clergy too.
OK that's clear, thanks. But then, that creates a separate issue. If the theologians and scholarly clergy are promoting the "small" God, then who is advancing the "big" God? Because the Fine-Tuning argument seems to rest squarely on the "Big God" concept. So if as you say, theologians are not supporting the "big God" concept, then who is? Rank and file believers and non-scholarly clergy? Devil's-advocate atheists (no pun intended:devil:)?

I asked this earlier, but no one could really answer it back then, and I (ironically) mused that "maybe Plotinus is the only one who can answer this :D"
 
And, I dunno, being impressed you can twist and squint to see some truth in Genesis 1:1 merely puts off the next obvious error to verse 11.

It is a tough one, I admit. Simple comment -- I don't have simple comment. Current science holds that very limited Carbon was produced during the Big Bang, if any. Essentially all of the elements that are heavier than lithium and beryllium were created much later, by stellar nucleosynthesis in evolving and exploding stars. So even if we stretch the idea of "plants" representing not even life, but organic molecule, nay, even carbon, sequence between day 3 and day 4 makes fun on literal interpretation.
 
Sure, let's just kick the can down to Genesis 6, we can ignore the truly egregious issue of stars appearing after plants or after nucleosynthesis.

But the serious problem then becomes that the text deceived people into having false beliefs for thousands of years.
 
Do you think I am repeating myself? First time I quoted you from the book of a famous physicist. Second time I quoted from the popular science website. Just what kind of source does PhD candidate in experimental particle physics need to accept that in general we cannot observe quantum superpositions? Third time the charm, this time Britannica. If you disagree with Encyclopedia -- please shoot them an email, don't argue here anymore, I give up, you win:

Sorry, I was assuming you were critically engaging my arguments instead of just copy-pasting (without quoting at all!) semi-relevant stuff from simplified popular science sources that do not address my points at all.

Considering I got the formalism of quantum mechanics as well as experimental evidence to back me up, there are not many things that could change my mind. But it would have to be an argument that actually engaged with what I wrote instead of generic explanations not intended for people who actually do quantum physics.

If you were willing to actually discuss, we could probably modify your statements in such a way that they are not wrong anymore. We would probably have to start with defining what you actually mean by the ill-defined term 'superposition state'. However, such a statement would not reduce to that there is something we cannot observe, but would make that statement ultimately dependent on whether the wave function is real. An that is question that quantum mechanics itself does not answer.
 
I agree with this view (not that they need my agreement). However, you sidestepped my question a little bit right? Or maybe I did not articulate it well enough... So going back to the older "Bigger" extra-universal Monotheistic God-concept... the one that that you described earlier and associated with Aquinas' writings... As an aside, I do not see how Aquinas statement you quoted defines God as existing outside of the universe. Can't God and the universe both be simultaneously eternal? Didn't you propose exactly that earlier in this thread?

Sure, maybe they could be. But Aquinas didn't think they were. He believed that the universe had a beginning in time - but we only know that because of revelation. Without revelation, we wouldn't be able to prove it. This was in opposition to other theologians such as Bonaventure who thought that it could be proven.

Whether Aquinas thought God is "outside" the universe or not is kind of a tricky question. He certainly thought that God isn't temporal or spatial, and famously likened God's view of the whole of history to a man on top of a tower watching a procession pass beneath. That would seem to put his God outside the universe. But at the same time, Aquinas didn't think that God is really a thing at all. His essence is existence, which is another way of saying that God simply is Being, or existence, itself. So he's not really "located" anywhere.

So in any case, why did that concept emerge? Was it in response to then-modern advances in understandings about the cosmos? Was the church and her proponents trying to establish divine ownership rights in the face of cosmic awareness? I ask obviously, because then my original question is still valid.

No, it was really a pre-Christian concept. There are hints of it in the Hebrew Bible (God being "I am", for example), but it mainly comes from Platonic philosophy. You can find very similar ideas in, for example, the second-century CE pagan philosopher Alcinous, in Plutarch a hundred years earlier, and indeed in Philo before him. It all ultimately goes back to Plato's belief that for something to truly exist, it must be immutable and eternal. Plato thought that only the Forms truly exist. Later Platonists systematised his thought and conceived of the Forms as ideas in the mind of God. The Christians took over this idea, so with people like Origen you find basically the same conception of God - as an abstraction of Being itself - and with Augustine you find the same notion that the Forms are God's ideas. Aquinas and the other medieval theologians simply inherited this basic view and elaborated on it.

OK that's clear, thanks. But then, that creates a separate issue. If the theologians and scholarly clergy are promoting the "small" God, then who is advancing the "big" God? Because the Fine-Tuning argument seems to rest squarely on the "Big God" concept. So if as you say, theologians are not supporting the "big God" concept, then who is? Rank and file believers and non-scholarly clergy? Devil's-advocate atheists (no pun intended:devil:)?

Yes, rank and file believers and clergy, but also other theologians. Dogmatic theologians certainly don't all speak with the same voice. Neo-orthodox theologians, evangelical theologians, Orthodox theologians, probably most Catholic theologians, and so on would go for maintaining the traditional God of classical theism. Those who back the "small God", as you put it, are more likely to be liberal Protestant theologians, including those associated with "open theism" and (more old-fashioned) process theologians.

That said, Richard Swinburne is what you'd call a "small God" person, and he's both Orthodox and pretty conservative, so you can't label everyone satisfactorily!
 
Plotinus, maybe you should post your qualifications and experience from the first Ask a Theologian thread, just to prove that you're not just a 'random poster'. After all, that post was eight years ago now, so we could hardly accuse you of being a fly-by-night poster, now could we?
 
Whether Aquinas thought God is "outside" the universe or not is kind of a tricky question ... Aquinas didn't think that God is really a thing at all. His essence is existence, which is another way of saying that God simply is Being, or existence, itself. So he's not really "located" anywhere.
Ah Pantheism correct? Those religion courses are starting to come back to me...

Now I raised this issue earlier, but now that I have your attention... How does this view of God deal with the issue of us (humans on Earth) being relevant enough to warrant God's attention, particularly as individuals?

If the answer is "magic" or "omniscience" or something similar, then that is a perfectly satisfactory answer, but I wonder if there is something more specific. Particularly as it relates to the "Fine-Tuning" concept. Because if we are all just figments of God's imagination, then why is Fine-Tuning even necessary or relevant? The physics of Star Trek don't need to "work" because Gene Rodenberry was not bound by physics in creating his universe.

No, it was really a pre-Christian concept... Aquinas and the other medieval theologians simply inherited this basic view and elaborated on it.
So my first question on this is - Was God-as-Existence the dominant concept being taught to rank-and-file Christians or was the small God concept being taught? Was this God-as-Existence a primarily scholarly concept that was known but not really preached? I ask because I never remember being introduced to such concepts until I went off to University... and I went to a lot of protestant Church and bible study growing up but also some Catholic school.

Second question - If the Forms (ideas) of Earth and all of us are contained only within God's mind, then are our physical manifestations within God's mind as well? Or outside the mind but just connected to and controlled by it? In other words, are we dreams or puppets in this model? I ask because it would still seem that under this construction of the universe, Fine Tuning would still be irrelevant. Or am I missing something?
Neo-orthodox theologians, evangelical theologians, Orthodox theologians, probably most Catholic theologians, and so on would go for maintaining the traditional God of classical theism. Those who back the "small God", as you put it, are more likely to be liberal Protestant theologians,
The Catholic v. Protestant distinction is helpful. And thanks Plotinus for all of that, very helpful and informative (Note that I snipped some of your comments for space).
 
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