How could we ever determine the nature of the "bottom layer" of reality? Even if a model were developed (something like the standard model of particle physics), we could never know that there isn't something even more fundamental.I think everything can actually be known. Why not? — Hillary
There is a psychological phenomenon called "the need for cognitive closure." We all have it to some degree - it's related to curiosity. But it can also drive people to embrace answers just because they are answers. Conspiracy theorists have a high need for cognitive closure. Plausibility takes a back seat, explanatory scope is the driver. "Knowing" the answer gives them comfort. IMO, it's worthwhile to seek answers, but counterproductive to land on answers just because of the compulsion to have an answer, rather than applying reasonable epistemic standards.There just has to be intelligences behind it. Or not, who knows, but I feel more comfortable, in the knowledge that there is such reason behind it. — Hillary
My issue is that "purpose" suggests intentionality, and intentionality implies an intelligence directing it. Theists often reply, "of course there is!", but that's not a deduction, it's an interpretation from a theist point of view — Relativist
A question popular among theists is: "why is there something rather than nothing?" But this assumes there is a reason - so to ask the question implies one assumes there is intentionality behind it all. Similarly, fine-tuning arguments assume there's a reason (or design objective). — Relativist
There is a psychological phenomenon called "the need for cognitive closure." — Relativist
How could we ever determine the nature of the "bottom layer" of reality? Even if a model were developed (something like the standard model of particle physics), we could never know that there isn't something even more fundamental. — Relativist
Quantum mechanics is weird - had we not been able to measure the weirdness (eg double slit), no one would have proposed such an odd model. Physical reality may very well have weirdness that doesn't expose itself to us. There would be no way to know. — Relativist
I assure you, Dawkins believes the processes are deterministic (perhaps with some influence from quantum indeterminacy). Genes are not making choices based on some sense of self-interest. The descriptions are terms of art.But so is Dawkins' interpretation of evolution. The selfish genes or memes testify and this is based on a dogma even: The central dogma of molecular biology. — Hillary
That's an assumption you make. There is no objective basis for the claim. Everything that exists has been caused by something prior, which can be described as a "causal reason" , but it's a phrasing to describe our motivation to discover "why?" There's no objective basis for assuming intentionality.The question is asked because there has to be a reason. — Hillary
The constants are what they are, and the universe has evolved accordingly. Fine tuning arguments assume there was a design objective and remark at the improbability of meeting the objective. The exact state of the universe today is grossly improbable, because of the many instances of prior quantum indeterministic events. But every unrealized state would have been equally improbable - so it is an absolute certainty that the universe would exist in a low probability state. Only if you assume humans (or a life permitting universe) was a goal does it seem remarkable that this particular universe came to be.And the fine-tuning argument is a good indication for the reason. The coupling constants (electric, color, and hypercolor charge, and to some extent mass) need to have a fixed ratio. In the string landscape 10exp 500 possibilities are offered but in the face of infinity this is small. — Hillary
The point is that the psychological need for causal closure makes some of us overly willing to accept answers just because they are answers, in spite of weak support and implausibility.Exactly! I said that earlier somewhere. When the gaps are closed, gods provide the last closure. — Hillary
We may not be able to explore deeper, but that doesn't mean this is truly fundamental. We used to think protons and neutrons were fundamental.Two basic massless particles, beneath the standard model seems the bottom. You logically can't go deeper. Or can we? — Hillary
I assure you, Dawkins believes the processes are deterministic (perhaps with some influence from quantum indeterminacy). Genes are not making choices based on some sense of self-interest. The descriptions are terms of art. — Relativist
That's an assumption you make. There is no objective basis for the claim. — Relativist
The constants are what they are, and the universe has evolved accordingly. Fine tuning arguments assume there was a design objective and remark at the improbability of meeting the objective. The exact state of the universe today is grossly improbable, — Relativist
It's weird in the sense that no one would have proposed it based on everyday experience of the world. The behavior did, at least, have an experimental manifestation. But there could be weirdness that doesn't manifest itself this way. We don't know what we don't know.It's not so weird if you understand it from a certain angle, — Hillary
We may not be able to explore deeper, but that doesn't mean this is truly fundamental. We used to think protons and neutrons were fundamental. — Relativist
Why exempt god(s) from requiring a reason for existing?No. But neither is there not to claim. And I think the incapacity of physics to find the cause of it's ingredients, elementary particles, pretty good reason for such assumption. — Hillary
It's weird in the sense that no one would have proposed it based on everyday experience of the world. The behavior did, at least, have an experimental manifestation. But there could be weirdness that doesn't manifest itself this way. We don't know what we don't know. — Relativist
Logically, humans can't go deeper in exploration, but that does not mean that's all there is. Remember, I wad responding to this:But I mean, if there are 2 basics, you can't go deeper logically. Two basis particles is the minimum. It can't be one. — Hillary
I think everything can actually be known. — Hillary
Why exempt god(s) from requiring a reason for existing? — Relativist
Remember, I wad responding to this:
I think everything can actually be known.
— Hillary — Relativist
But the phenomena does manifest itself in a detectable way.But the everyday world was not looked at in the experiments. — Hillary
But the phenomena did manifest itself in a detectable way.
If there is a god, it is probably not directly detectable. If one is open to that possibility, one should be open to the existence of other non-detectable things — Relativist
Sounds like a special pleading. You acknowledge that something exists without explanation, and we agree on that. IMO, the notion that it is something as complex as intelligent beings seems absurd.Because they are different from the material universe. They are eternal intelligences, without the need for explanation. — Hillary
Yes, more than likely. You should agree, since you believe there are gods. How could you possibly determine their properties?Not sure I follow you here... You mean not everything can be known? — Hillary
Sounds like a special pleading. You acknowledge that something exists without explanation, and we agree on that. IMO, the notion that it is something as complex as intelligent beings seems absurd. — Relativist
Yes, more than likely. You should agree, since you believe there are gods. How could you possibly determine their properties? — Relativist
What makes you think that?Non-intelligent matter, like elementary particles and space, etc. need intelligences to exist. — Hillary
Non-intelligent matter, like elementary particles and space, etc. need intelligences to exist.
— Hillary
What makes you think that? — Relativist
What do you mean by "right qualities"?Just try to imagine how particles, virtual ones, or real ones, and the space the move in (which can be made of the hidden variables of QM) can come into existence. With all the right properties (or a mechanism to include all possibilities, which isn't the string landscape, and why not simply posing that they have the right qualities.). From nothing. I can't explain that. And the direction in which they move, towards the greater entropy, is an indication too. — Hillary
What do you mean by "right qualities"? — Relativist
Why do you assume there are QM hidden
variables? Does quantum indeterminacy unsatisfying? — Relativist
You agree something exists that is uncaused. Do you also agree that it didn't "come into" existence? — Relativist
Why assume the uncaused thing(s) are as complex as intelligent being(s)? — Relativist
This is pure speculation. There is no evidence for it. This is true of many things you've asserted. I don't see how these can possibly be justified beliefs.Why assume the uncaused thing(s) are as complex as intelligent being(s)?
— Relativist
Because them gods are the non-material forms of life, as heaven is the form of the universe. Without the evolving into beings... — Hillary
The constants are what they are, and there are consequences. This doesn't mean they're "right".The right coupling strengths of particles, which determines interaction, and are just numbers and determine the relative strengths of vertex factors, The right speed of light. The right Planck constant. The dimensionslity of space, though for three dimensions there are as many translational as rotational degrees of freedom. They could be interrelated though but still. Where does it come from? What blows the fire into the equations? — Hillary
This is pure speculation. There is no evidence for it. This is true of many things you've asserted. I don't see how these can possibly be justified beliefs. — Relativist
The constants are what they are, and there are consequences. This doesn't mean they're "right". — Relativist
The "fire in the equations" (sounds like something Vilenkin said) is based on a platonic view of laws of nature: equations existing in platonic heaven that mysteriously affect the objects to which they apply. Law realists (e.g. Armstrong, Tooley, Sosa) view laws of nature as physical relations, part of the physical structure of the world, existing exclusively in their instantiations . e.g.the attraction between electron and proton reflects a physical relation between them. — Relativist
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