I was thinking of the possibility of design or the semblance of it arising spontaneously out of randomness. — TheMadFool
1. If there is order in the universe then there exists a god — TheMadFool
As tim points out, #1 is the correct form. But this simple argument is rather pointless without including the difficult part, which is to demonstrate how a god is necessary for the existence of order. — Metaphysician Undercover
1a. All things that have order are things that have a designer — TheMadFool
The negation of 1a would be:
1b. Some things that have order are not things that have a designer.
We need just one instance to prove 1b. What is this instance? — TheMadFool
May I suggest you think about what "order" means. Going this way you may find that "design" isn't what you think it is, nor "designer." Nor, for that matter, "means." For these exercises in logic the terms have to be univocal or you have to take great care to make sure the meaning in use is preserved and not altered in the conclusion.
You may even recognize that such proofs are really only about associations of words, some being valid associations, some not - but that the arguments themselves never prove anything at all about the world itself.
That is, the argument from design is merely an exercise in words, and fallacious - invalid - at that. It therefore needs no refutation, being always already self-refuting. It is instead a thing to be set aside, like a childish thing, when you have got the benefit of playing with it, and can. — tim wood
But why would you even think that? Did you not cover statistics at school? The set of {all things which have order and we know to have a designer} is such an infinitesimally small subset of {all things which have order}, and is not even a properly stratified sample (they're all ordered by life on earth). It would be statistically invalid to draw any conclusions at all from such a tiny, unrepresentative sample. — Isaac
the design argument is an argument from analogy where the universe is taken as ONE object — TheMadFool
Just look out the window. Again, everything is in some order, and that order is unique. You're arbitrarily favoring some orders. Different example: a building is "imploded"; after the smoke and dust clears, it's just a pile of rubble. Ordered? yes, and uniquely so. Designed? Well, the order is a consequence - is that a designer?To deny it you'd need to show me order without a designer. — TheMadFool
Just look out the window. Again, everything is in some order, and that order is unique. You're arbitrarily favoring some orders. Different example: a building is "imploded"; after the smoke and dust clears, it's just a pile of rubble. Ordered? yes, and uniquely so. Designed? Well, the order is a consequence - is that a designer? — tim wood
Well then it can't be an argument from analogy as there is no other object to which to compare it. — Isaac
There is. man-made objects, as a group, is compared to the universe itself. — TheMadFool
1. A watch has order. The watch has a designer
2. The universe (as ONE object) has order
Therefore
3. The universe has a designer — TheMadFool
3 does not follow from 1 unless there is some reason to think that the universe is otherwise in the same category as watches.
Consider...
1. A watch has parts made of metal. A watch has been designed the way it is by a watchmaker.
2. A randomly scattered pile of nails has parts made of metal
Therefore
3. A randomly scattered pile of nails must have been designed that way by a watchmaker. — Isaac
No. To say order is strongly associated with a designer is begging the question. That is the very matter the argument is trying to resolve. Does the order in the universe mean that it is designed? — Isaac
There is no begging the question fallacy because the order-designer link is inferred — TheMadFool
Maybe think about inference a bit? I can infer that the moon is made of green cheese. Doesn't make it so. And denying a fallacy isn't so much illogical, but rather pathological.
Language gives many gifts. Misused, misunderstood, those same gifts can become curse. — tim wood
As for your moon-green cheese "inference" you'll have to show me what you mean. Thanks. — TheMadFool
1) If I'm tim, then the moon is made of green cheese.
2) I'm tim
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Conclusion: the moon is made of green cheese.
If you're willing to assume the antecedent, then you can infer anything from anything.
1) If I'm a magic hippopotamus, then the moon is made of green cheese.
1. a) Assume I'm a magic hippopotamus
2) I'm a magic hippopotamus. (1. a)
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Conclusion, and so forth. — tim wood
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