It may leave you as a deist...but it most assuredly does not leave me as mostly atheist. I'd sooner become a Trump supporter than an atheist...and I would not become a Trump supporter if you held a gun to my head. — Frank Apisa
I’m aware of the argument but I do not see how it makes the case that infinite regresses are impossible. A first element presupposes finitude, so why would we apply it to an infinite regress? I agree that a finite regress would require a first element, but disagree that an infinite regress does. — NOS4A2
So then to what do we owe the reality of the first element, a first tuner, if not an anterior one? Sure a finite regress all elements owe their reality to the first element, but I cannot see how that is true of an infinite one. — NOS4A2
Consider the possibility of an elephant in my backyard. There are exactly two possibilities (elephant, ~elephant), and (per your claims) we should ignore evidence (e.g. no elephants have been sighted in the vicnity), so that suggests we should consider the probabilty of an elephant in the backyard as 50%. That's silly. — Relativist
"Is the universe a creation?' however has no skewed underlying answer space.
— Devans99
Demonstrate this. — fdrake
Why would an infinite causal regress require a first element for it to exist? — NOS4A2
It is a boolean sample space. It consists of two outcomes, the empty set and the claim that the universe is an egg. The empty set has probability 0, the universe is an egg has probability 1. — fdrake
50/50 is impossible in that case. The only consistent assignment of probabilities to that set which satisfies the probability axioms assigns all probability to the universe is an egg. Therefore, the universe is an egg with probability 1. — fdrake
I ask again: Where does that leave us? — Frank Apisa
Sample space: {empty set, The universe is an egg}, probability of the universe being an egg, 1! Logic! Mathematics! Probability! — fdrake
I merely showed that the 2 possibilities you presented are not symmetrical — Relativist
The point is that there's no objective basis for assigning prior probabilities to the two possibilities you stated (creator vs ~creator); — Relativist
Hearing is not listening. Besides, "more counter arguments" flood this thread just like your other "creationist" threads yet you incorrigibly cling to your dogmas. Your replies to my as well as others', counter-arguments are riddled with defects in logic and pocked with pseudo-scientific (i.e. woo-of-the-gaps) nonsense. You can't see the cosmological forest, D99, for the pseudo-philosophical (i.e. kalamic) "beam in thine own eye". — 180 Proof
To suppose one can refine those percentages logically...
...totally biased. — Frank Apisa
I get that. Science points us down roads of further discovery of unknowns. If we allow your Deist assertion, where does that go? What do we discuss next? Does it impose a direction on our subsequent thoughts and inquiries? — Pantagruel
If pushed, almost 0%, it would be very surprising for me. It necessitates a lot of hypothesis with vaguely specified mechanisms relying upon incredible contingencies with no reason to believe them over natural explanations — fdrake
For me to make any sense of it, I'd want there to be at least a description of the creation mechanism before I even felt comfortable assigning any probability to that outcome whatsoever, never mind quantifying over creation mechanisms like this would require. — fdrake
Assuming that your main goal is to justify your intuitive belief, and not merely the "fine tuning" version, which you yourself cite as evidence, my question is this: If we allow that the universe was created, what then? Let's say God did create the universe so that it evolves according to emergent-evolutionary principles. What's next? Do we stop trying to comprehend and study natural processes? What's next? — Pantagruel
The existence/non-existence of a creator is not symmetrically balanced. How likely is it that the supernatural exists? — Relativist
"Devan is wrong about all conclusions he tries to derive from maths" or "Devan is right about some conclusions he tries to derive from maths", it's 50-50, boolean outcomes... — fdrake
There are 2 possibilities: 1)life was an unintended consequence of the universe's properties. 2) life was a design objective.
You haven't given a reason to think #2 is more likely than #1. — Relativist
Anyone truly assessing the totality of the evidence for and against the notion of an "intelligent creator of the universe" should come away with a very loud, "I DO NOT KNOW." — Frank Apisa
Not "atemporal", then. "Atemporal" mind doesn't make sense anyway. — jorndoe
An estimate would have to compare against all possible worlds (cf modal realism). Not sure how you'd go about that. — jorndoe
Wouldn't the supposed fine-tuner of the universe have to be uniquely fine-tuned to create fine-tuned universes? Surely can't be mere coincidence...? — jorndoe
I agree that if one assumes the universe is fine-tuned for life, this entails a fine-tuner. The problem is that you cannot show that the universe was likely to have been fine-tuned for life. Your unstated premise is that life was a design objective. — Relativist
In general, suppose the universe had a different set of properties, and this resulted in objects of type X. The mere existence of X objects does not imply X objects were a design objective. — Relativist
If you wanted to beg the question of God why assume the universe had to be "fine-tuned" from the beginning? God could just as easily have ordained the spontaneous emergence of ordered complexity.... — Pantagruel
I ask my question again...because your initial premise seems like nothing more than begging the question. You are essentially starting your argument with: There is a god. — Frank Apisa
Just thought I'd point out that your D still doesn't follow. :D
A. Assume an infinite causal regress exists
B. Then it has no first element
C. If it has no nth element, it has no nth+1 element
D. So it cannot exist
— Devans99
D. So the infinitude in A can't be numbered so — jorndoe
Life (e.g. human being) fine-tunes her models of the universe - otherwise known as reflective equilibrium, a rarefied, special (cognitive) mode of adaptive behavior. — 180 Proof
Explain why this "uncaused fine tuner" is not its own environment aka "the universe" (or nature itself). — 180 Proof
Why multiply inexplicable (thereby question begging) entities needlessly? — 180 Proof
…,−4, −3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,… — fishfry
If the universe of this very special fine-tuner isn't itself fine-tuned for life then how did it ever come into existence as life? I guess that a universe has the right conditions for life aka fine-tuned universe doesn't imply a conscious fine-tuner. If that's the case then why can't this universe be the one that didn't have fine-tuner? — TheMadFool
Right, which is al consistent with those entities emerging as a result of systemic evolution, as documented and tested through systems theory. — Pantagruel