A creator is merely a personification of "a fluke", no? And Occan's Razor reminds us that we can do without the added personification (à la Laplace).if you ask "how did the universe came to be?", atheists reply "it's just a fluke". — Agent Smith
if you ask "how did the universe came to be?", atheists reply "it's just a fluke". — Agent Smith
ill-formed (@Banno's pet peeve) — Agent Smith
A creator is merely a personification of "a fluke", no? — 180 Proof
This is facile and untrue. It shows a lack of understanding of how the universe works at a fundamental level. — T Clark
Ill formed is anther way of saying it's the wrong question.
But here your fallacy is black-or-white. — Banno
It's difficult, mi amigo, only to the degree one lacks scientific and historical literacies, applied numeracy, intellectual integrity (i.e. humility to admit "I/we don't know") and, last but not least (as per Einstein), imagination. :fire:I like 180 Proof's stance on the issue - stick to the facts, reject all claims inconsistent with the facts, speculate at your own risk! Construct a weltanschauung as free of woo-woo as possible. Alas, easier said than done! — Agent Smith
It's difficult, mi amigo, only to the degree one lacks scientific and historical literacies, applied numeracy, intellectual integrity (i.e. humility to admit "I/we don't know") and, last but not least (as per Einstein), imagination. :fire: — 180 Proof
This is facile and untrue. It shows a lack of understanding of how the universe works at a fundamental level.
— T Clark
Are you saying atheists are making facile and untrue statements? Well, go on then, edify us/them as to the true state of affairs. — Agent Smith
if you ask "how did the universe came to be?", atheists reply "it's just a fluke". — Agent Smith
No, I'm saying that atheists in general would not say that because it's not true and shows a lack of understanding of how the universe works — T Clark
Otherwise, the universe might not have "come to be" at all but rather eternally transforms (e.g. A. Guth) from one 'configuration of physical constants' into another (e.g. R. Penrose's 'conformal cyclic universes') whereby, occasionally, sentient metacognitive agents evolve and interpret their universes in perspectival terms (e.g. a personified fluke aka "creator") — 180 Proof
... the universe might not have "come to be" at all but rather eternally transforms (e.g. A. Guth) from one 'configuration of physical constants' into another (e.g. R. Penrose's 'conformal cyclic universes') whereby, occasionally, sentient metacognitive agents evolve and interpret their universes in perspectival terms (e.g. a personified fluke aka "creator").
When asked, Smith, the most reasonable answer, it seems to me, is "All that we know is that the observable universe is here and that we can only measure the age of its currently observable state to be about 13.81 billion years old; that's all we know so far, anything else today – chance or creator – is fiction." — 180 Proof
So I'm asking the wrong question, eh mate? — Agent Smith
As for black-and-white fallacies, what, pray tell, are the other alternatives to god (creator) and chance in re how the universe came to be? — Agent Smith
:up:The emphasis on chance comes about when one tries explaining that evolution is not teleological. That gets twisted to the idea that evolution is nothing but chance. — Banno
:up:And of course its fun to speculate and imagine, beyond what can currently be established, just so long as we're clear that's what we're doing — busycuttingcrap
No, that's not what i claimed.
As for black-and-white fallacies, what, pray tell, are the other alternatives to god (creator) and chance in re how the universe came to be?
— Agent Smith
Evolution.
It is an error to think evolution involves chance — Banno
I think 180 cut to the heart of it; asking what caused the creation, beginning, or origin of the universe when we have not actually established that there ever was a creation, beginning, or origin of the universe is putting the cart before the horse (all we know with any confidence is that the universe was in an extremely hot and dense state some 13.8 billion years ago- what, if anything, preceded that is not known or understood).
And of course its fun to speculate and imagine, beyond what can currently be established, just so long as we're clear that's what we're doing — busycuttingcrap
Good article.
The emphasis on chance comes about when one tries explaining that evolution is not teleological. That gets twisted to the idea that evolution is nothing but chance. — Banno
That's what I've been trying to say all along. WTF?
— Agent Smith
Yeah, alright,
It is an error to think evolution involves chance.
— Banno
was too strong; should have been more like "It is an error to think evolution is nothing but chance". — Banno
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