I have no explanation that includes fine-tuning, because that's a creationist myth. — Kenosha Kid
To illustrate, role a die. Whatever value you get had a low probability of occurring compared with it not occurring. This is not evidence that the die is loaded. It's just that you only rolled the die once. Refer to the anthropic principle for the rest. — Kenosha Kid
Recurring eternal inflation explains not only that our current physical laws are as likely as any other, but also that, if our current set of laws is possible (an empirical fact), they are inevitable. It explains how a hot Big Bang could occur, why there was an initial period of massive expansion, and it does so with an "agent" that meets the criteria of being outside of time. — Kenosha Kid
What is a betting man meant to conclude? — Devans99
It does not explain fine tuning - the multiverse (if it exists) MUST BE FINE-TUNED for life - many of the fine tuned parameters are multiverses level parameters. — Devans99
eternal inflation was caused by something — Devans99
If you were God, would not you consider it a mighty deed to create a whole multiverse of life supporting universes? — Devans99
Not to make silly generalisations from one event. — Kenosha Kid
It doesn't need to. It ceases to be a meaningful question. — Kenosha Kid
Nope, by definition it is eternal. — Kenosha Kid
Especially if I didn't exist. Creating a universe while not existing is hugely impressive. — Kenosha Kid
But there is no option with the fine tuning argument - the BB happened once and will not be repeated for our edification. And the 20 or so fine tuned parameters - sort of count as 20 separate events / instances of fine tuning. Both the WAP and SAP are rubbish. Fine tuning for life is a strong argument.
But its fundamentally a probabilistical argument, so no-one has any option but to be a betting man on fine tuning for life. — Devans99
- there is a 25% chance that he's guilty because of fingerprints on the knife
- there is a SEPARATE 50% chance he's guilty because of blood on his cloths — Devans99
That's not a betting man's argument, that's a missionary's argument, based on ignorance and bad logic. Even with only one universe, the parameters of that universe only need an explanation at all if life is some kind of desired outcome from the start. That's why creationists can't get their heads around it. It has to be about me... — Kenosha Kid
1. Evidence A shows that there is a 50% chance that John is the shooter and a 50% chance that Mary is the shooter.
2. Evidence B shows that there is a 50% chance that John is the shooter and a 50% chance that Mary is the shooter.
3. I use the reasoning you've used before and say that there's a 50% + 50% * 50% = 75% chance that John is the shooter.
4. I use the reasoning you've used before and say that there's a 50% + 50% * 50% = 75% chance that Mary is the shooter.
5. There is a 75% chance that John is the shooter and a 75% chance that Mary is the shooter (and so also a 25% chance that John is not the shooter and a 25% chance that Mary is not the shooter). — Michael
I don't agree. If you found a watch on the beech that told the time, would you conclude:
A) By some random co-incidence, particles have arranged themselves into a functioning watch?
Or
B) Someone made that watch? — Devans99
But that's two separate propositions:
- Is John the shooter?
AND
Its just fine for it to be 75% probability for BOTH of these separate propositions are true. — Devans99
I would say that 50% John. 50% Mary, cancel out - there is a 50% chance that John did it and a 50% chance that John did not do it - giving a 0% chance that John did it. — Devans99
has no bearing here since there's no sense in which the particular universal constants we have can be said to be complex in themselves. — Kenosha Kid
As an aside, you can never prove that God does not exist! — Devans99
(Besides, both "deliberate" and "act" are loaded, indicating where you started rather than where you ended.)
You somehow wish to show an "atemporal deliberate act" of a unique, thinking, living superbeing deity...? :D
Here atemporal is inert and lifeless at best.
with strangely "atemporal causes", I'd sort of expect an infinite universe
So demonstrate this atemporal change, it's your argument (and presumably you don't want to add more appeal to ignorance or special pleading).
...
It isn't fine. If Mary is the shooter then John isn't the shooter, so if there is a 75% chance that Mary is the shooter then there is a 75% chance that John isn't the shooter, which contradicts the other conclusion that there is a 75% chance that John is the shooter. — Michael
Your reasoning also entails that there is 50% chance that Mary did it and a 50% chance that Mary didn't do it, giving a 0% chance that Mary did it. So despite the evidence being that there's a 50% chance that John did it and a 50% chance that Mary did it, it's actually the case that there's a 0% chance that either of them did it. — Michael
They could both be the shooters. — Devans99
Evidence A shows that there is a 50% chance that John is the shooter and a 50% chance that Mary is the shooter
You are actually saying:
Evidence A shows that there is a 50% chance that John is the shooter and a 50% chance that John is NOT the shooter
Which clearly cancels out to 0%
There's that fallacy once again, repeated unabated as if never having been pointed out before.
Comments suggests you started out with the divine fallacy. — jorndoe
Here atemporal is inert and lifeless at best.
So demonstrate this atemporal change, it's your argument (and presumably you don't want to add more appeal to ignorance or special pleading)
No it doesn't. There is a 50% chance that a coin lands heads and a 50% chance that a coins lands tails. This is the same as saying there is a 50% chance that a coin lands heads and a 50% chance that a coins does not land heads. Therefore this "cancels out" to there being a 0% chance that the coins lands heads? Surely you can see how wrong that is? — Michael
But we must combine evidence here:
- We know that the chance of heads is 50%
- You have introduced additional evidence that the chance of heads is 50% and the chance of not heads is 50%
- That is not evidence - it cancels out
- So the chance of heads remains at 50% — Devans99
Can you disprove the existence of unicorns for me please? — Devans99
Have you been there then? Which holiday agency was that? — Devans99
Well I admit this is where I am stuck. I have possibly in mind that an atemporal being maybe like a brick - the brick is timeless - so the left side of the brick is static, but the right side of the brick can grow to accommodate additional actions. — Devans99
I'm not introducing additional evidence. I'm stating the known fact that there is a 50% chance that the coin will land heads and a 50% chance that the coin will not land heads. This doesn't "cancel out" to there being a 0% chance that the coin will land heads. — Michael
If you don't understand this post and if you continue to talk about these kind of probabilities "cancelling out" to 0% then my attempts to educate you are futile and so I won't waste any more time. I suggest you do some research into probability theory. This is really basic stuff. — Michael
They do exist — in children's stories and fantasies.
Unless that's what your god is supposed to be, the onus probandi still remains in your court (along with the increasing fallacy-count). — jorndoe
The other day. A dull place. Inert and lifeless. Half a star out of five. — jorndoe
You're a kook — Michael
Did you not read my reply? This is not a proof, not a reductio, not a successful way to establish something as logically impossible, even in principle: you need to derive a contradiction. Not only do you not derive a contradiction, this argument is explicitly circular and question-begging: infinite sequences going on forever cannot be the premise for rejecting an infinite past (its your 2nd premise in the above) since whether the past can be infinite is precisely the claim that is in dispute.I've already proved time has a start to you! Did you not read my reply? Once again:
- The past is either a finite number of days long, or greater than all finite number of days long
- Nothing can be greater than all finite numbers; they go on forever
- So time has a start
This is not a proof, not a reductio, not a successful way to establish something as logically impossible, even in principle: you need to derive a contradiction — Enai De A Lukal
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