The fine-tuning argument for God's existence

(worst thing that happened to skeptics since 2nd Law of Thermodynamics)

What has thermodynamics got to do with disappointed sceptics? I know that the 2nd Law is popular amongst creationists who somehow think it "disproves" evolution, but what does it have to do with fine-tuning?

In fact, I'd go so far as to say that the God of Abraham, as applied to these sort of arguments, has absolutely nothing to do with physics in the first place.
 
Which would contradict the purpose of life itself, as such, there will never be an absolute proof of God or proof that God does not exist, However, there's ample evidence - think "hints" to support the notion of God's existence.

Where exactly does this idea that God will never be proven or disproven come from? Just because we cannot do so now doesn't mean we wont be able to in the future.
 
Naw, shamayim means sky.

Do you ever rest? It must be very early in the morning :D

I just love it the way you contradict every single info bit that comes out of my fingertips. Shamayim (Strong's H8064) has two main meanings, as simple as air and as metaphysical as spiritual realm:

Look down from heaven (H8064) and behold from the habitation of thy holiness and of thy glory: where is thy zeal and thy strength, the sounding of thy bowels and of thy mercies toward me? are they restrained?

How art thou fallen from heaven (H8064), O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations!
 
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.

According to standard cosmology model, the initial state of the space-time, and thus gravity, of the early universe had very low entropy. The ‘mass-energy’ of the initial universe had to be precise to get galaxies, planets, and for us to exist. The most extreme example of fine-tuning has to do with the distribution of mass-energy at that time.

Just how precise?

[snipped this bit for space]

All these numbers are extremely small when compared to the precise fine-tuning of the Penrose number, the most extreme example of fine-tuning that we know of.

In summary, the fine-tuning of many constants of physics must fall into an exceedingly narrow range of values for life to exist. If they had slightly different values, no complex material systems could exist. This is a widely recognized fact. Attributing the fine-tuning evidence to dumb luck or accident is not only irrational, but rather insane.

Dismissing the fine-tuning evidence as nothing remarkable is called denial.

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

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 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.

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?

As I explained in my previous post that you ignored, the situation is not like a lottery, it's like a raffle. Even if you have 10^gazillion tickets, one of those tickets is going to win. The fact that the winning ticket has only a one in 10^gazillion chance of winning means nothing, because so did every other ticket, and there were 10^gazillion of them. In the case of the values of the various universal constants, sure, maybe it was staggeringly improbable that any particular given set would win out. But it was certain that some set would win out. No matter which set won out, it was (according to you) equally probable to any other set winning out.

The onus is on you to explain why the actual set was any less probable than any other. I also challenged you before to tell us what you would have expected to be the outcome if the universal constants were random. What values do you think would be more probable than the actual ones?

Until you do that, you're like someone saying "The chances of Arthur winning the raffle were seven billion to one, therefore the raffle must be rigged!" That would be reasonable only if you could show that there's something special about Arthur that doesn't apply to any of the other potential winners (e.g. he was predicted in advance to win). Similarly, you need to show why the actual values of the universal constants are much more significant than all of the others that they could have had. The mere fact that they make life possible does not meet this criterion, because it just pushes the problem back one step: what's so significant about life compared to the different phenomena that would have been possible with different values for the universal constants?

Moreover, an uncaused cause is a logical necessity for without an uncaused cause, infinite regression is invoked and therefore nothing could have existed in the first place (I feel as if a lot of skeptics in this section do not understand this point).

I understand the point, but I reject it, because it's invalid. I stated earlier that Aquinas's Second Way, which is what this is, is invalid and rests on an equivocation. Aquinas says that if you were to "remove" the First Cause, all of the subsequent causes would disappear. Therefore, there must be a First Cause. But he equivocates on "remove". On the assumption that there really is a First Cause, yes, removing it would destroy everything else. But on the assumption that there is no First Cause, the only sense in which one "removes" it is to deny its existence. And that wouldn't entail the loss of all the subsequent causes. In other words, this argument assumes its conclusion, and is therefore invalid.

Wrong. Scientists and philosophers recognize that, logically, there must be an initial, uncaused Cause of the Universe. [Those who attempt to argue the eternality of the Universe are in direct contradiction to the Law of Causality (since the Universe is a physical effect that demands a cause), as well as the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which indicates that nothing physical lasts forever (see Miller, 2007).]

I don't know who your "Miller, 2007" is, but if he really attributes such views to all "scientists and philosophers", he's dead wrong. Philosophers certainly do not accept that there must be an uncaused Cause. Indeed the vast majority of philosophers - like the majority of scientists - are atheists. Don't try to co-opt them onto your side.

The claim that "the universe is a physical effect that demands a cause" is pure assertion. How do you know this?

Aristotle, in Physics, discusses the logical line of reasoning that leads to the conclusion that the initial cause of motion must be something that is not, itself, in motion—an unmoved mover (1984, 1:428). Thomas Aquinas built on Aristotle’s reasoning and said:

Now whatever is in motion is put in motion by another.... For motion is nothing else than the reduction of something from potentiality to actuality.... It is therefore impossible that in the same respect and in the same way a thing should be both mover and moved, i.e., that it should move itself. If that by which it is put in motion be itself put in motion, then this also must needs be put in motion by another, and that by another again. But this cannot go on to infinity, because then there would be no first mover, and, consequently, no other mover.... Therefore it is necessary to admit a first efficient cause, to which everyone gives the name of God (1952, 19:12,13, emp. added).

God, not being a physical, finite being, but an eternal, spiritual being (by definition), would not be subject to the condition of requiring a beginning. Therefore, the law does not apply to Him.

You badly misunderstand St Thomas, even though I explained his meaning in this post. When he talks about an Unmoved Mover he is not talking about a temporally first cause. He is talking about a simultaneous mover, like an engine in a car. Aquinas thinks, on the basis of Aristotelian physics, that objects must be kept in motion, or everything would grind to a halt. There must therefore be an Unmoved Mover that keeps things going like a spring in a watch. That's what he's talking about here. And of course he's wrong. We've known since Newton (in fact, since Descartes) that an object in motion tends to stay in motion. No universal engine is required to explain the continued phenomenon of motion.

St Thomas expressly denied that the universe must have had a beginning in time. He rejected the arguments of those who thought that it must have done, and insisted that in fact it could have been eternal (although in fact revelation teaches us that it was not). You badly misrepresent him by attributing to him the view that God differs from the universe in not requiring a temporal beginning: Aquinas thinks that neither God nor the universe requires one.

Now if you think Aquinas is such a great authority, read that text and see what you make of his arguments! Personally I think he's right on this score: neither science nor philosophy can show that the universe had a beginning. Science may show that the observable universe had a beginning, but whether there was anything prior to that is beyond the reach of science.

Concerning the Law of Causality, renowned German philosopher, Immanuel Kant, said that “everything which is contingent has a cause, which, if itself contingent, must also have a cause; and so on, till the series of subordinated causes must end with an absolutely necessary cause, without which it would not possess completeness” (Kant, 2008, p. 284, emp. added). An uncaused Cause is necessary. Only God sufficiently fills that void.

This is an even worse misrepresentation. Only someone who doesn't understand anything of Kant's philosophy could have written this. The passage you quote from Kant is from somewhere in Bk II, ch. 3 of the "Transcendental Dialectic" division of the Critique of Pure Reason (it would have been easier to locate the precise passage if you'd given any more indication than just "Kant 2008", which is useless). Kant is here reporting what he calls the "cosmological argument". He reports it for the purposes of refuting it.

In fact, this is what he goes on to say in section V of the aforementioned chapter (and because I cite my references, I'll tell you that this is on pp. 414-19 of the 1993 Everyman edition):

Immanuel Kant said:
In this cosmological argument are assembled so many sophistical propositions, that speculative reason seems to have exerted in it all her dialectical skill to produce a transcendental illusion of the most extreme character...

The following fallacies, for example, are discoverable in this mode of proof:

(1) The transcendental principle: Everything that is contingent must have a cause – a principle without significance, except in the world that we sense... But in the present case it is employed to help us beyond the limits of its sphere.

(2) From the impossibility of an infinite ascending series of causes in the world of sense a first cause is inferred; a conclusion which the principles of the employment of reason do not justify even in the sphere of experience, and still less when an attempt is made to pass the limits of this sphere.

(3) Reason allows itself to be satisfied upon insufficient grounds, with regard to the completion of this series. It removes all conditions (without which, however, no concept of necessity can take place); and, as after this it is beyond our power to form any other concept, it accepts this as a completion of the concept it wishes to form of the series.

And so on...

The concept of a Supreme Being satisfies all questions a priori regarding the internal determinations of a thing, and is for this reason an ideal without equal or parallel, the general concept of it indicating it as at the same time an individual being among all possible things. But the concept does not satisfy the question regarding its existence – which was the purpose of all our inquiries; and, although the existence of a necessary being were admitted, we should find it impossible to answer the question: What of all things in the world must be regarded as such?...

It is something very remarkable that, on the supposition that something exists, I cannot avoid the inference, that something exists necessarily. Upon this perfectly natural – but not on that account reliable – inference does the cosmological argument rest. But, let me form any concept whatever of a thing, I find that I cannot think the existence of the thing as absolutely necessary, and that nothing prevents me – be the thing or being what it may – from thinking its non-existence. I may thus be obliged to admit that all existing things have a necessary basis, while I cannot think any single or individual thing as necessary...

If I must think of something as existing necessarily as the basis of existing things, and yet am not permitted to think any individual thing as in itself necessary, the inevitable inference is, that necessity and contingency are not properties of things themselves – otherwise a contradiction would result; that consequently neither of these principles is objective, but that they are merely subjective principles of reason...

What you have there is an absolutely devastating series of criticisms of this argument. Note in particular his final point that the whole notion of "necessity" and "contingency" are purely mental constructs in the first place, meaning that attempting to impose them on outside objects is an exercise in futility. If you think Kant is such a great authority, find the complete text and read it yourself! I will repeat again the central objection Kant makes:

"Everything that is contingent must have a cause" – a principle without significance, except in the world that we sense... But in the present case it is employed to help us beyond the limits of its sphere.

Kant is exactly right. This is exactly the point that we have been making throughout this thread, though in reference to the teleological argument rather than the cosmological. These arguments make assumptions about general principles that we cannot know. We cannot know that everything that's contingent must have a cause. How could we possibly know such a thing? All we can say - as Kant indicates - is that everything we experience seems to have a cause. But that's just within the phenomenal sphere. How can you possibly assume that such a principle applies to the noumenal sphere, i.e. extra-mental reality?

I'm just astonished that anyone would try to cite "renowned German philosopher" Immanual Kant as an authority to support the cosmological argument, since he's the one who most famously demolished it. And I'm disappointed that anyone would quote Kant's formulation of the argument that he explicitly presents only to undermine, as if he's supporting it. That's as misleading as it gets.

Consider: if there ever were a time in history, when absolutely nothing existed—not even God—then nothing would exist today, since nothing comes from nothing (in keeping with common sense and the Law of Thermodynamics, Miller, 2007). However, something exists (e.g., the Universe)—which means something had to exist eternally. That something could not be physical or material, since such things do not last forever (cf. Second Law of Thermodynamics, Miller, 2007). It follows that the eternal something must be non-physical or non-material. It must be mind rather than matter. Logically, there must be a Mind that has existed forever. That Mind, according to the Bible (which has characteristics proving it to be of supernatural origin, cf. Butt, 2007), is God. He, being spirit, is not subject to the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

I don't know who this "Miller" of yours is, but he's just rehashing bad arguments from William Lane Craig. If time had a beginning, then there never was "a time in history when absolutely nothing existed", any more than there's a page of a book before the front cover. There's just the start of time and, presumably, the end of time at the other end. You don't need to posit something outside the universe starting it off, because there's no "before" for it to start from. So the first premise in this argument is wrong. It is based on a misunderstanding of temporalism.

Note: to reject the idea that the universe is the first uncaused cause even further: extrapolation of the expansion of the Universe backwards in time using general relativity yields an infinite density and temperature at a finite time in the past. This singularity signals the breakdown of general relativity. How closely we can extrapolate towards the singularity is debated—certainly no closer than the end of the Planck epoch. This singularity can be considered the "birth" of our universe. Based on measurements of the expansion using Type Ia supernovae, measurements of temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background, and measurements of the correlation function of galaxies, the Universe has an estimated age of 13.8 billion years. An uncaused cause is eternal by definition, otherwise, it needs to have a beginning which would require a cause according to physical laws.

Here again you make two mistakes. The first is to suppose that all this science shows that the universe had a beginning. It doesn't - it only shows that the observable universe had a beginning. There could, for all we know, have been something quite different before that - perhaps a previous universe which left the seed of this one, as Hume speculated.

The second mistake is to assume that things that have a temporal beginning must necessarily have causes. I don't know of any reason to suppose that that's true.

I feel as if the focal premise & argument of this thread has been lost amidst all the intellectual dishonesty, snide remarks, and general denial - and that's putting it really politely.

I don't wish to descend into the mud here, but I'd point out that you are the one who, in this thread, has badly misrepresented the views of Leonard Susskind, Thomas Aquinas, and (most of all) Immanuel Kant. I won't call that "intellectual dishonesty" but I will say that I don't think you're in much of a position to accuse others of it. I'll add that you've also ignored an awful lot of the objections made to your argument, particularly (to my mind, anyway!) in my posts that I linked to above, so accusing others of "denial" seems a tad harsh too.

Cosmologists can calculate what they believe happened from the very earliest moments of the big bang, and can estimate the values of a range of cosmic constants and physical properties. There are scores of these numbers, but not all are independent. Physicist Paul Davies lists 13 constants and 12 derived quantities; cosmologist Martin Rees discusses six numbers, but as most of these are ratios of other numbers, his total comes to about a dozen.

It turns out that many of these numbers must lie within very narrow ranges, both now, and right back at the early stages of the big bang, for the universe to exist and form galaxies, stars and planets, and to provide the opportunity for complex life to appear.

A list of some of the most notable of these examples of "fine-tuning" (e.g. relating to the strength of the four fundamental forces, the mass of fundamental particles, etc) is at it looks like it was designed, so I will only describe two of the most amazing examples here.

The cosmological constant, or vacuum energy, is a major determining factor of whether the universe collapsed in on itself shortly after the big bang, or flew apart so fast that no matter coalesced into stars and planets, or is in a narrow range that allows a viable universe to form. Its value is obtained by subtracting two large cosmic forces, and theory suggested that it too would be large. But for the universe, stars & planets to exist, it must be very small. It turns out that the large forces cancel out accurately to 119 decimal places, yielding the required value. String theory "guru", Leonard Susskind says: "To make the first 119 decimal places of the vacuum energy zero is most certainly no accident."

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. To put this number in perspective, 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. Dumb luck or intentional design? Don't fool your intellect.

Which leads us to seek an explanation.

You say nothing new here (even once again citing Rees and Susskind as authorities on this matter, even though both utterly reject the conclusions you draw from their observations). If you can explain what Penrose's calculations actually are that supposedly show the minuscule probability of getting the constants that we have, we might be making progress. But simply repeating over and over and over again that some Big Brain or other has asserted this gets us nowhere. What's the evidence? What's the argument?

And when you're done with that, why does this outcome (as opposed to any other possible one) require a particular explanation? I made this point above.

There are some who argue that it just happened that way, and who maintain that mathematical probabilities are inapplicable to such an event as the big bang. But most cosmologists have rejected this option - the probabilities have been estimated by many and they are simply too large for most scientists to ignore them. (It is true that Victor Stenger has produced an enormously simplified computer model suggesting that the universe isn't all that improbable, but he doesn't seem to have persuaded many of his colleagues.)

In addition to the Penrose estimate, Lee Smolin says: ".... just how probable is it that a universe created by randomly choosing the parameters will contain stars. Given what we have already said, it is simple to estimate this probability. ..... The answer, in round numbers, comes to about one chance in 10^229." This is much much less than the probability of picking a given baryon out of the universe at random.

This doesn't even begin to address the point about the raffle. Is the universe we see staggeringly unlikely? Sure, let's grant that. But so what? Would any alternative possible universe be any more likely? I'll say this point again, since you've missed it every other time it's been made:

If there's going to be a universe at all, the physical constants had to have some value or another. The values they actually have are no less likely (for all we know) than any given alternative.

In a raffle, some ticket has to win, even if any given ticket is staggeringly unlikely.


So you haven't ruled out chance at all.

This has probably become the most favoured option over the past decade. It overcomes the objection that the fine-tuning is too unlikely to have occurred by chance, by postulating that there is an extremely large number of universes or "domains " of the one universe, perhaps even an infinite number, all with different values of constants, and perhaps even different constants as well. Ours is one rare case where the universe allows life to appear. The mathematics has been done, and the multiverse is claimed to be consistent with cosmological theory. Leonard Susskind says multiple universes are "inevitable consequences" of known science.

The theory has been controversial. Martin Rees says: "These universes would never be directly observable, even in principle." Susskind: "The existence of other pocket universes remains a conjecture". For this reason, many scientists say the multiverse is pseudo science, "more like metaphysics than physics". But proponents believe if the theory behind the multiverse can be tested in other areas, it would give confidence that it may be correct where it cannot be tested.

But, as Davies has pointed out, if there are indeed multiple universes, then one still has to explain how a multi-universe "generator" came into existence, so finely tuned as to produce an array of universe with different characteristics. I find the multiverse hypothesis amazing. It requires us to believe that not just one universe came into existence for no reason, but that a universe generator capable of producing an enormous number of universes or domains appeared for no reason. It magnifies the problem of finding an explanation, not reduce it. Amazingly ridiculous that is.

Are we debating with you or with Paul Davies? In any case, here again we've pointed out the flaws in this argument.

First, even if there is a multiverse, it doesn't follow that there must be a "multiverse generator". Maybe the multiverse just is. Maybe every possibility just is an actuality in its own universe. Maybe there is no explanation for that, and none is needed, because every possibility has an intrinsic tendency towards actuality (as Leibniz argued).

Second, even if there is a "multiverse generator", you're not entitled to describe it as "fine-tuned". I made precisely this point before, but you ignored it. The whole point of the fine-tuning argument is that the laws and constants in this universe are supposedly tweaked just right for life. But if we're talking about a "multiverse generator" that generates vast numbers of universes, all with different laws and constants, we're no longer describing a system that seems tweaked just right for life. The only remarkable fact now is that there are laws that govern the "multiverse generator" at all, not the fact that these laws are notably biocentric. And this seems far less remarkable. So your conclusion is wrong. If the multiverse theory is correct - and even if it entails the existence of a "multiverse generator" - what needs explaining is far less remarkable than what needed explaining before. The fact that there's more of it is really neither here nor there.

Rejecting the multiverse nonsense leads us to two options: 1) God 2) Dumb luck. How did it come to be the way it is?

Those aren't the only two options. At the end of my previous post, which as I may have mentioned you have ignored, I gave a perfectly plausible alternative explanation for why the universe is the way it is, even assuming that there's something specially interesting about it, based on Leibnizian principles about the nature of possibility. I still think that's a better explanation than God, and it's certainly a more scientific one because it's simpler.

Be whatever type of universe we live in, it seems that it has to be extraordinarily special...

This is the fundamental error in your whole argument. You haven't given any reason to think that this universe is special compared to all the other possible ones. You've given reason after reason after reason to think that it's different, in that it can support life and the others can't. But being different is not the same thing as being special. When you start using terms like that, you've abandoned science, because they are evaluative terms, not factual ones.
 
Even if you have 1^gazillion tickets,

I really, really hate to nitpick - but I will, because I can't help it. 1^gazillion = 1

1 to any power is still 1.

10^gazillion, now, or indeed any integer barring 0 and 1, is a very large number.

Other than that, the above is just another example of a well-written post from you, Mr Plotinus.

I fear though, you're just preaching to the choir. The only readers who will give it much attention are those who are already convinced.
 
There are so many parallel discussions that true state of the debate is getting buried under piles of information.

Maybe I was a bit harsh, as I did indeed not take "parallel discussions" in mind when I wrote what I did, and that is a good point.

However, your posting style is more of the "respond to random things here and there, instead of taking in the totality of the point made as a whole and discussing the main points raised." You've already made up your mind that the fine-tuning argument is a good one, even though it's been debunked, and it seems that nothing will ever change your mind. Maybe I am mischaracterizing you, and if so, let me know, but I see your posts as someone who's not open to changing his mind - responding to select things from various posts, rather then actually working towards some sort of a conclusion to the question at hand. Every once in a while you throw in random things that don't make any sense either - like Bible quotes and things about love and faith. Your posture is a defensive one as well. All of this made me say "Hold on a second here, this is garbage"

Honestly, you're making a very simple mistake in logic here, and I'm kinda getting worried that you're intentionally not understanding.

It's not that, he's just not open to the possibility that he's wrong. That's why everything is continuously repeated over and over, from and to this individual. It's not a debate, he's just on the defensive - defending the conclusion he's made ahead of time.
 
Sommerswerd, you probably read this and said to yourself! There! Something can come out of nothing!
No. I did watch the "Curiosity" series though... And it was more like "Wow! Something out of nothing? Interesting... well I learned something today!" I linked the article because I thought it might be more accessible than expecting someone to go watch the documentary.
Big Bang isn't considered as an explosion in space, but rather it was an explosion of space. Someone has to take credit for that!
No I don't think so. Isn't that what we are debating? You say someone has to be given credit. I say it popped into being like the particles... no credit needed.

And also, why does "someone" have to be Yahweh? Or Elohim? How does fine tuning establish even a distinction of God as the original uncaused?... rather than the adolescent offspring of some other superbeing, who is totally unconcerned with their "teenager's" ant-farm (ie our universe). Who is God then? Yahweh or his Mom? Does it matter? I mean if we have backed God all the way into the corner of "the guy who flipped on the light switch" or "lit the firecracker" or "powered on the computer" or whatever colorful analogy we can use to describe "causing" the big bang then who cares? So God had to be the one who turned the universe on and things just went from there? That's it?!? So what?
In the beginning God created the ...
Yes I played Civ 4 too... obviously... so I remember that, along with Leonard Nemoy's awesome voice!:D (I also had to go to religious service 4 times a week growing up, so there's that too;)) And what does ditech.com have to do with anything:confused:
Have you actually spoken to any Nobel prize winners
This is actually funny because as an undergrad I did actually meet (on different occasions) Daniel Tsui and Toni Morrison who were both teaching at the school at the time:lol: So what? Does that disprove your point anymore than you meeting whoever you met disproves mine?
Somebody/something has to take credit even for empty space
:confused: Again, Why?
 
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?

Plotinus, you, you are special. That's the focal point of revelation. You are given an ability to employ all your senses and all your reason to evaluate how sensible is this message. Are there any good indications in the universe that things were fine tuned from the very beginning with special you in mind? Indeed, is it possible to show that anthropic principle can predict anything about physical world we are living in? One of the answers is in the history of the discovery of triple alpha process.

The triple-alpha process is a set of nuclear fusion reactions by which three helium-4 nuclei (alpha particles) are transformed into carbon.

The triple alpha process is highly dependent on carbon-12 and beryllium-8 having resonances with the same energy as helium-4, and before 1952, no such energy levels were known. The astrophysicist Fred Hoyle used the fact that carbon-12 is abundant in the universe as evidence for the existence of a carbon-12 resonance. This could be considered to be an example of the application of the anthropic principle: we are here, and we are made of carbon, thus the carbon must have been produced somehow. The only physically conceivable way is through a triple alpha process that requires the existence of a resonance in a given very specific location in the spectra of carbon-12 nuclei.

Hoyle went boldly into nuclear physicist William Alfred Fowler's lab at Caltech and said that there had to be a resonance of 7.69 MeV in the carbon-12 nucleus, and that all of the physicists in the world had missed it. Fred Hoyle's audacity in doing this is remarkable, and initially all the nuclear physicists in the lab were skeptical to say the least. But he was persistent and kept coming back to the lab and talked to every assistant and associate individually. Finally, a junior physicist, Ward Whaling, fresh from Rice University, who was looking for a project started believing Hoyle, and decided to look for the resonance. Fowler gave Ward permission to use an old Van de Graaff generator that no one else was using, and everyone joined in with suggestions for Ward. The experiment took 6 months, and Hoyle was back in Cambridge when his outrageous prediction was verified.

This of course cannot and should not prove the revelation about us being so special that God loved the world so much that he gave his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life. However your heart now has additional evidence to consider your answer to the very simple question: did you ultimately came into existence from nothing (as you have stated you have no problems in believing to that) after gazillion of blind chances aligning together or everything has deeper meaning to it, and you are born into elegant universe with the starry sky above you and the moral law within you. Which message does your heart trust as being more likely, after your reason and your senses examined the totality of things available to them?
 
However your heart now has additional evidence to consider your answer to the very simple question: did you ultimately came into existence from nothing (as you have stated you have no problems in believing to that) after gazillion of blind chances aligning together or everything has deeper meaning to it, and you are born into elegant universe with the starry sky above you and the moral law within you. Which message does your heart trust as being more likely, after your reason and your senses examined the totality of things available to them?

The former. I haven't been given any good reason to prefer the latter!
 
The former. I haven't been given any good reason to prefer the latter!

You must have very tough standards about "good reasons" then. Do you positively know if Higgs boson exist, or you just trust smart guys from ATLAS and CMS collaborations? Unless you can apply your senses and reason in detecting the particle by your own self you would need to concede that you trust people like Joe Incandela and don't trust people like St. John. See, if you apply your own elevated standards of "good enough reasons" to about anything else you will end up going crazy or nihilist or both. But of course existence of Higgs boson does not affect your personal pride in any way, while acknowledging that you are in need of salvation -- does.

On this note I would like to ask skeptics and you, in particular, the following -- just what kind of "good reasons" would be good enough for you guys to trust the revelation? What exactly needs to happen so that you would follow the example of the father of the child from Mark 9:24, who crying out with tears, said, Lord, I believe; help thou my unbelief.
 
In reality, superpositions can never actually be observed - all we can see is the consequences of their existence, after individual waves of a superposition interfere with each other. Thus, we can never observe atom in its indeterminate state, or being in two places at once, only the resulting consequences, and physical reality is not determined until the act of measurement takes place and “solidifies” the situation into one state or another.

Repeating your statement does not change its truth value. It is still wrong. In a quantum teleportation experiment, you need to be able to observe a specific superposition state without destroying it. otherwise it will not work. And there are enough experiment which did work.


Part of the problem of observing and measuring superpositions is known as decoherence. Any attempt to measure or obtain knowledge of quantum superpositions by the outside world (or indeed any kind of interaction with their environment, even with just a single photon) causes them to decohere, effectively destroying the superposition and reducing it to a single location or state, and also destroying the ability of its individual states to interfere with each other. Decoherence, then, results in the collapse of the quantum wave function and the settling of a particle into its observed state under classical physics, its transition from quantum to classical behavior.

Decoherence is also the main reason that quantum theory really only applies in practice to the sub-atomic world: in the large-scale world in which we live, it is all but impossible to isolate anything from interaction with its environment, especially given the countless trillions of photons bouncing off every object all the time. Even an object made of just 60 atoms requires extreme cold to prevent it from becoming “classical” rather than "quantum". It is the interaction of quantum objects with the environment that produces what we understand as classical objects, such as cats and tables. Thus, in practice we never observe a quantum system directly; we only observe its effect on its environment.

That explanation covers almost all situations and can be used to explain those, but it is still fundamentally flawed. Decoherence does not destroy superposition states. It only destroys states that are not an eigenstate of the system. I can build a system in such a way that the superposition state I want to observe is not destroyed by decoherence or measurements. I could even engineer the system even further so that decoherence produces a superposition state.

In case you do not believe that, here is evidence for it:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v504/n7480/abs/nature12801.html
 
just what kind of "good reasons" would be good enough for you guys
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.

God has systematically moved from "inside that cave over there" to "deep in the dark woods" to "up on that Mountain" to "high in the clouds" to "the sun" to "the sky" to "space" to now being "outside of all space-time". Meanwhile, as a child when I looked at the Polar cap and see that there is just water there I realize, OK I don't have a fireplace and there is no North pole...so... At some point I have to just accept it and move on.

In other words... "When I was a child, I talked as a child, I thought as a child, I reasoned as a child. When I became a man, I gave up childish things."
 
You must have very tough standards about "good reasons" then. Do you positively know if Higgs boson exist, or you just trust smart guys from ATLAS and CMS collaborations? Unless you can apply your senses and reason in detecting the particle by your own self you would need to concede that you trust people like Joe Incandela and don't trust people like St. John. See, if you apply your own elevated standards of "good enough reasons" to about anything else you will end up going crazy or nihilist or both. But of course existence of Higgs boson does not affect your personal pride in any way, while acknowledging that you are in need of salvation -- does.

It's offensive to assume that someone doesn't believe the same things as you out of "personal pride". How do you know that? Suppose I were to say that the only reason anyone believes in God is because they want to think that the universe is run by a giant version of themselves, and this is an extremely arrogant prejudice - would this be fair or charitable?

On your actual question, no, I don't think I do have "very tough standards" about good reasons. Certainly I don't "positively know" whether the Higgs boson exists, or many other things. I'm inclined to think that the people who spend their time investigating it are more likely to be right about it than anyone else. But I don't think we really know very much at all.

But there's considerably less reason to believe in God than there is to believe in the Higgs boson, or almost anything else. I'm not applying some impossibly high standards of reason here. I don't think there's any even vaguely good reason to believe in God. And I think that there are several good reasons not to believe in God. So why would I?

On this note I would like to ask skeptics and you, in particular, the following -- just what kind of "good reasons" would be good enough for you guys to trust the revelation? What exactly needs to happen so that you would follow the example of the father of the child from Mark 9:24, who crying out with tears, said, Lord, I believe; help thou my unbelief.

If the question is, what would incline me to believe in God, I would answer: some phenomenon which we have good reason to think is better explained by God's existence than by his non-existence. That's not a very high standard of proof, but I don't think it's been met. That alone wouldn't make me actually believe in God, but if there were a lot of such evidence, I might well do so. I've changed my mind on this matter in the past and I'm open to doing so again.

If the question is, what would lead me to "trust revelation", I would answer: some good reason to think that it is revelation. E.g. if the source in question could be shown to contain information that is best explained by its being revelation, e.g. accurate predictions of the future etc. Here again, no putative source of revelation has come close to meeting this criterion.
 
The problem is that the Christian revelation has already been shown to be unreliable. So, it's tough answering what would change my thinking on that.
Do you ever rest? It must be very early in the morning :D

I just love it the way you contradict every single info bit that comes out of my fingertips. Shamayim (Strong's H8064) has two main meanings, as simple as air and as metaphysical as spiritual realm:

Look down from heaven (H8064) and behold from the habitation of thy holiness and of thy glory: where is thy zeal and thy strength, the sounding of thy bowels and of thy mercies toward me? are they restrained?

How art thou fallen from heaven (H8064), O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations!

The more parsimonious explanation is that the believers conflated the two concepts, obvs. Coming 'down' from Heaven is otherwise a nonsensical expression
 
The more parsimonious explanation is that the believers conflated the two concepts, obvs. Coming 'down' from Heaven is otherwise a nonsensical expression

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?
 
On this note I would like to ask skeptics and you, in particular, the following -- just what kind of "good reasons" would be good enough for you guys to trust the revelation?

I'm assuming you'd consider me a skeptic, so I'll answer this.

From my point of view there are many religions vying for my attention, each one with its claims about God, the creation of the universe, about the afterlife, the nature of existence, and other related matters. Some of these claims are compatible, but most of them are not, and so it seems to me that 3 things are possible:

A. One of the religions that exist is right about the nature of reality and the basic claims that it makes
B. The truth is dispersed here and there throughout various religions
C. We haven't figured out the truth yet and all religions are wrong about the fundamental claims that they make.

I hope you can agree that these are the only 3 options here for me. (Or am I missing any?)

Re-phrasing your question, if you'll allow me to do so, to this:

What kind of "good reasons" would be good enough for you guys to accept one religion as the truth over all the others?"

Leads to my answer:

The "good reasons" I'd accept are the same as in any other field, where we haven't yet arrived at the truth, and the competing claims are so plentiful.

For example, let's say we're debating which grand unifying theory of physics is going to be the unifying theory of physics. Is it going to be a form of string theory, maybe M-theory, or quantum gravity theory? Or something else, maybe something we haven't thought up yet? Nobody knows yet - so I'm going to wait and see until the experts figure it out.

I approach the question of God in a similar manner. We haven't figured out if God exists yet, and if he/she/it exists what the nature of God might be. There are a lot of competing answers to these questions out there, but we don't know which is right - if any. I have no choice but to sit on the sidelines and see if we ever figure it out. I sort of doubt it, but hey, it'd be amazing if we did.

I can't get any more detailed than that, because it's hard to predict the actions of a God who might or might not exist. What can this God do to prove his/her/its existence to me? It's hard to say. I can't even imagine what a being like that might be capable of doing, probably a lot of things I'm not even capable of imagining. So it's a bit useless for me to try to imagine scenarios under which I would be convinced that he/she/it exists, I think. But having said that, I hope I've answered your question.

I would take a logical and/or mathematical proof - something like the "fine-tuning" argument - but just something that actually works and isn't an argument that has 2 major flaws. The less flaws, the more I'll be convinced. 0 flaws and you got me.
 
Repeating your statement does not change its truth value. It is still wrong.

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:

How then is it possible to account for the fact that superposition states are never actually observed? According to the standard (quantum common sense, T.) interpretation of quantum mechanics, when a physical system is being observed, explicitly probabilistic laws apply exclusively. These laws do not determine a precise position for a given particle but determine only a probability that it will have one position or another. Thus, the laws as applied to a particle in a superposition of regions A and B would predict not that “the particle exists in A and the particle exists in B” but that “there is a 50 percent chance of finding the particle in A and there is a 50 percent chance of finding the particle in B.” That is, there is a 50 percent chance that the measurement alters the particle’s wave function to one whose value is zero everywhere except in A and a 50 percent chance that it alters the particle’s wave function to one whose value is zero everywhere except in B.

The problem of accounting for the absence of superposition states in measurements of quantum mechanical phenomena, so-called “measurement problem”, has gradually emerged as the most important challenge in quantum mechanics.

Two influential solutions to the measurement problem have been proposed ("less" common sense, T. ). The first, due to the American-born British physicist David Bohm (1917–92), affirms that the evolution of the wave functions of physical systems is governed by laws in the form of linear differential equations of motion but denies that wave functions represent everything there is to say about physical systems. There is an extra or “hidden” variable that can be thought of as “marking” one of the superposed positions as the actual outcome of the measurement. The second, due to G.C. Ghirardi, A. Rimini, and T. Weber, affirms that wave functions are complete representations of physical systems but denies that they are always governed by laws in the form of linear differential equations of motion.
 
I'm assuming you'd consider me a skeptic, so I'll answer this.

From my point of view there are many religions vying for my attention, each one with its claims about God, the creation of the universe, about the afterlife, the nature of existence, and other related matters. Some of these claims are compatible, but most of them are not, and so it seems to me that 3 things are possible:

A. One of the religions that exist is right about the nature of reality and the basic claims that it makes
B. The truth is dispersed here and there throughout various religions
C. We haven't figured out the truth yet and all religions are wrong about the fundamental claims that they make.

I hope you can agree that these are the only 3 options here for me. (Or am I missing any?)

Re-phrasing your question, if you'll allow me to do so, to this:



Leads to my answer:

The "good reasons" I'd accept are the same as in any other field, where we haven't yet arrived at the truth, and the competing claims are so plentiful.

For example, let's say we're debating which grand unifying theory of physics is going to be the unifying theory of physics. Is it going to be a form of string theory, maybe M-theory, or quantum gravity theory? Or something else, maybe something we haven't thought up yet? Nobody knows yet - so I'm going to wait and see until the experts figure it out.

I approach the question of God in a similar manner. We haven't figured out if God exists yet, and if he/she/it exists what the nature of God might be. There are a lot of competing answers to these questions out there, but we don't know which is right - if any. I have no choice but to sit on the sidelines and see if we ever figure it out. I sort of doubt it, but hey, it'd be amazing if we did.

I can't get any more detailed than that, because it's hard to predict the actions of a God who might or might not exist. What can this God do to prove his/her/its existence to me? It's hard to say. I can't even imagine what a being like that might be capable of doing, probably a lot of things I'm not even capable of imagining. So it's a bit useless for me to try to imagine scenarios under which I would be convinced that he/she/it exists, I think. But having said that, I hope I've answered your question.

I would take a logical and/or mathematical proof - something like the "fine-tuning" argument - but just something that actually works and isn't an argument that has 2 major flaws. The less flaws, the more I'll be convinced. 0 flaws and you got me.

What if none of the religions on earth are right? I am still not getting how the Bible was written as a religious manifesto. It was written before the religions touting it were formed. A manifesto would be written after the religion had gained some popularity. Or at the most the thoughts of some leader. In the early church there were no humans who claimed to be leaders. It was just the writings of humans doing every day stuff. Moses was not the founder of Judaism, even though he claimed to be a leader, it was not a religion, but an economy and government. That it happened to have spiritual underpinnings did not make it a religion. I have pointed out before that what happened to Moses and the Hebrews has natural occurrences, that would not seem any more supernatural to us if they happened today. In fact most would just write it as them making up God to explain the natural. What if God did visit Moses on the mountain? Moses guided a people group whose ethnicity is so entwined in it's religious life, that at times, it is hard to tell them apart. Yet most humans separate their personal daily life from their religious life, like a garment that can be taken off and put on at will.

Most religions today are just handed down from generation to generation. But people can shed a religion, and pick up another one fairly easy, like any other lifestyle. My question would be is religion just another lifestyle and really has nothing to do with God at all? It would seem to me that God does not need any religion to endorse who God is. God just is and humans are just trying to figure out God, in their own way. If one human gets enough followers to think the same way as they do, then a religion is founded, but such a thing could either have found God, or just as easily missed God by a universe.

Even if what was written was embellished and changed for later "eureka" moments, those moments if they happened really only effected in a tangible way those who experienced them. That they can be used 2000+ years later has little to do with God at all. It has to do with the people who experienced God at that particular moment of time. Human thought changes and evolves all the time, yet God remains constant and yet can interact with humans within any given time frame. What happened in the past can either strengthen or destroy how one perceives God today. It is still possible to experience God today though on one's own terms and not just on what humans hand down from generation to generation.

Humans experience God all the time. They however have reasoned the experiences away as not God, and God no longer exist in any tangible way for them.
 
There is nothing ever convenient about truth. Do you have room for something even more striking? There are these people, you see, called Christians, perhaps the craziest people on planet Earth. They honestly believe their moral limitations were so grave that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world so that we might live through Him. In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. You either call yourself a good person who does not need to be saved and call God's opinion arrogant, or you risk being called names like arrogant while informing about God's opinion. Nothing new.

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.
 
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