I do still find it hard to make sense of an evil god, except as an enemy of the good god which is actually worshiped. What I can make sense of is a conception of the big bad world in its entirety as a metaphorical god, but then the relationship becomes ambivalent. Or there is the strange vision of God as presented in the book of Job, a glorious and powerful God who is beyond human notions of good and evil. — five G
I agree with you about participation in the cosmic plan. The only hitch is that maybe humans could resent and rebel against the plan of a god they considered evil. Or perhaps they obey out of fear of Hell or some other punishment. That makes the world a kind of prison, and casts God as the worst tyrant ever.
It's possible that I'm thinking from humanist prime directives that I just can't see around. For 'us,' a god must make sense, be rational, and seem virtuous by human standards in order to 'truly' be god and not just some powerful alien tyrant or inscrutable, cold machine.
Thoughts? — five G
I’m kind of with you, but I’m also very reluctant to endorse anything associated with intelligent design. — Wayfarer
To claim that the universe was created by chance is nonsense because, as I mentioned earlier, all that's possible, probabilistically, is to say that there was an X% chance for the universe to have come into existence. Nowhere in this is the information that such and such caused the possibility of a universe to become a reality. — TheMadFool
Yes I think you, and I am too for that matter, are viewing it from a humanist perspective, which has grown out of the western judeo-christian tradition. — ChatteringMonkey
Any unambiguous good would do. It’s quite hard to come by. — Wayfarer
But we end up with global self-devouring humanism and runaway technological disruption. The tech promises and threatens. It could/should liberate us from drudgery, but it also threatens unprecedented domination. — five G
This is presumably only going to get worse as AI and automation can take over more and more roles in society, which was still a way people could feel part of that bigger whole and derive some meaning (although that certainly has it's problems too, I won't deny). — ChatteringMonkey
And how we will use it, will depend on the state our civil societies will be in... which, you know, doesn't look to good at this particular moment :-). — ChatteringMonkey
I think Wayfearer was originally using the term in another way though. By chance, as a fluke or an accident, means something like lack of design or intention... non-teleological. We never know for sure, but it seems like we came about by the process of evolution, which is a non-teleological process, i.e. "by chance" — ChatteringMonkey
And I agree with you! In some ways, the ‘created vs chance’ is a false dichotomy. — Wayfarer
Well, "chance" is the wrong word if you want to talk about the absence of teleology because chance is an aspect of the teleological too. — TheMadFool
A word can have a different meaning in a different context. — ChatteringMonkey
A word can have a different meaning in a different context.
— ChatteringMonkey
Which meaning of "chance" makes sense in the sentence "the universe came into existence by chance"? — TheMadFool
A word can have a different meaning in a different context.
— ChatteringMonkey
Which meaning of "chance" makes sense in the sentence "the universe came into existence by chance"?
— TheMadFool
The non-teleological one. He scored that goal by chance, means he didn't intent to score the goal... not that the goal was score by some probability. — ChatteringMonkey
The non-teleological one. He scored that goal by chance, means he didn't intent to score the goal — ChatteringMonkey
not that the goal was score by some probability. — ChatteringMonkey
Exactly my point. A goal can't be scored by chance. Similarly, a universe can't be created by chance. — TheMadFool
Teleology isn't necessarily an attribute of a god-created universe. God is seen as the cause that made what is a possible universe (ours) a reality whether it be by design (teleology) or not. Aristotle's first cause argument for the existence of a god doesn't even imply that god, as the first cause, has to be a conscious, self-aware, being so we can forget about purpose (teleology). Since,a non-teleological universe is compatible with god, it doesn't make sense to differentiate chance and a creator-deity on that basis. — TheMadFool
I don't why you are so hung up on this particular point, it's just a figure of speech, not literally a probability. People do say that a goal was score by chance, by which they mean that it wasn't intended... — ChatteringMonkey
What do you mean it's a "figure of speech"? Do you mean that when I say "the universe was created by chance" I mean something other than the literal meaning of that sentence and the words contained therein? — TheMadFool
I'm afraid that's not true. People actually mean that chance created the universe and chance here is being offered as a good enough alternative to a creator-god. — TheMadFool
However, chance is simply a description of the relationship between possibilities and actuality. Chance isn't a cause and it, therefore, can't bring the universe into existence. — TheMadFool
Yes, not literally but figuratively. Note that 'by chance' is not the subject of the sentence in 'he scored that goal by chance'. It's not chance that score the goal, he did.... by chance — ChatteringMonkey
It is interesting to contemplate a tangled bank, clothed with many plants of many kinds, with birds singing on the bushes, with various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth, and to reflect that these elaborately constructed forms, so different from each other, and dependent upon each other in so complex a manner, have all been produced by laws acting around us. These laws, taken in the largest sense, being (1) Growth with reproduction; Inheritance which is almost implied by reproduction; (2) Variability from the indirect and direct action of the conditions of life, and from use and disuse; a (3) Ratio of Increase so high as to lead to a Struggle for Life, and as a consequence to (4) Natural Selection, entailing (5) Divergence of Character and the (6) Extinction of less improved forms. Thus, from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animals, directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone circling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved. — Charles Darwin
Yes, not literally but figuratively. Note that 'by chance' is not the subject of the sentence in 'he scored that goal by chance'. It's not chance that score the goal, he did.... by chance
— ChatteringMonkey
By the way,
Google definition of "chance": the occurrence of events in the absence of any obvious intention or cause — TheMadFool
So, there has to be someone who causes the goal whether by chance or not. Similarly, there has to be something that causes the universe whether by chance or not. A valid competing explanation for a person who scores a goal by chance isn't chance itself, it''s something else. Similarly a valid alternative to god having created the universe isn't chance but something else. :chin:??? — TheMadFool
Can chance be a cause? — TheMadFool
So, an infinite regress of causes notwithstanding, evidence seems to point in the direction of the universe being caused by something. What's interesting here is the proof that the universe had a cause is a posteriori (all observed phenomena have causes) but the objection to it is a priori (infinite regress). Rationalism or Empiricism? — TheMadFool
I think Hume showed that the assumption of Causality with a big C, as a metaphysical principle, is unwarranted — ChatteringMonkey
So, the coronavirus that cause the ongoing pandemic is "out of habit"? That we can treat tuberculosis with the specific drugs that kill the causative bacterium is just an illusion? — TheMadFool
Evidence of something causing something, is no proof of everything being caused always. — ChatteringMonkey
Evidence of something causing something, is no proof of everything being caused always.
— ChatteringMonkey
Well, at least Hume wasn't correct that causation is "out of habit". — TheMadFool
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