Which "concept of God"?The concept of God is inherently unprovable and unverifiable. — gevgala
Well, at the very least, "the onus is on the design advocate to" demonstrate scientifically that both the universe and life are "designed" in the first place. :roll:I don't think the onus is on the design advocate to find a designer ... — Andrew4Handel
:up:The recent explosion of human technology is arguably mostly down to the fortuitous (or not) discovery of fossil fuels in my view. — Janus
Confirmation of my criticism that your "Enformer / Programmer" = "intelligent designer" = "creator" = woo-of-the-gaps. :sparkle: :eyes:I sometimes identify myself as an agnostic Deist. I have no direct experience of the putative deity of my theory, merely circumstantial evidence, sufficient for conviction of creation. — Gnomon
This statement is not true unless, of course, you / someone can cite conclusive scientific evidence in favor of "ID". As I've pointed out already, unique and testable predictions cannot be derived from it, and so, like other creationist myths, "ID" doesn't explain anything about the natural world.What we do know is that intelligent design exists — Andrew4Handel
No. However, I always avoid posting excessive word salads and tendentious run-on non sequiturs. Search my post history.PS do you only make short posts?
:clap: :100:My mental model of YOUR enformer is the one YOU have delivered, wrapped in YOUR deistic bow!!
1. Do you want to withdraw YOUR comparison of YOUR enformer with deism?
2. Do you want to withdraw YOUR insistence that there has to be a first cause for the creation of our universe?
3. Do you want to withdraw YOUR insistence, that any posited first cause for the creation of our universe, has to be a 'mind with intent?'
If you don't want to retract these comparators, that YOU invoked, then YOUR enformer, remains exactly as I suggested, yet another lazy god of the gaps posit. — universeness
:fire:↪180 Proof
Understood. The denial of atoms was intended to illustrate my point about terminology. The term atom is still being used, but it means something different than what Democritus meant. And now it is not only that atoms are divisible but that talk of particles is being rejected and replaced by field — Fooloso4
The fundamental difference is that humans exist and, as far as humans know, a "creator deity" does not exist.If you believe humans can create things but are uncreated then the same can apply for a hypothetical creator deity. — Andrew4Handel
I don't deny "ID" any more than I deny "magic". :roll:Are you denying the existence of intelligent design? — Andrew4Handel
I know the primeval soup is not an artifact like your phone or house or the city. Compositional fallacy, Andrew: just because there are designed artifacts in the universe or that physical regularities appear "designed" to us in no way entails they are "designed" or the universe it is "designed". Same applies to "cause" – causes in the universe do not entail that the universe is the effect of a cause In both cases, the evidence against cosmic "creation / design" is e.g. (1) quantum uncertainty > (2) planck-radius universe > (3) low entropy past > (4) deep time > (5) deep space ... (6) autopoeisis > (7) evolution. :fire:Do you believe my phone created itself from a primeval soup?
Skeptics, however, are not "essentially" agnostics.Agnostics are essentially skeptics. — Agent Smith
Confused / uncertain about g/G-belief, agnostics are not particularly "honest". As you know I'm a disbeliever.Are you pushing for honesty (agnosticism)?
I'm no molecular biologist or botanist, but off the top of my head:I would like to hear the explanation of how a strawberry emerges from atoms. — Andrew4Handel
Broadly, those seem to be the steps.atoms –> organic molecules –> DNA –> germination + nitrogen + water + photosynthesis –> strawberry
So you must believe we're alway being watched because "all around us" on sunny days we see 'faces in clouds'.People ask where is the evidence for design. Well it is all around us. — Andrew4Handel
and yet you asked anyway and I replied with two links to articles which corroborated my initial comment. Clearly, you've either not read what I've proffered or do not understand what you read or you're disingenously denying the facts stated therein. In any case, I'm not going waste any more time discussing "ID" unless, of course, you can demonstrate that "ID" is an explanatory model and thereby derive testable predictions from it (which none of it's proponents have done to date).... ID makes no unique, testable predictions either. — 180 Proof
In short I would require that the following points made in the following article be refuted. They haven't been and stand as defeaters of the so-called "argument".180 Proof So, what would count as evidence of intelligent design? In other words, what evidence would you require? — Sam26
There isn't a shred of evidence, and ID makes no unique, testable predictions either.This brings us back to, "Is there evidence of intelligent design in our universe?" — Sam26
Well, speaking only for myself, I take theism at face value and demonstrate that its sine qua non claims about g/G are not true (i.e. either incoherent or false). I suppose the relevant "bias" here is I reject untrue claims.Atheists put theist ideas in boxes, by which I meant they mischaracterize their beliefs based on their own biases. — T Clark
:up:Most broadly speaking, reduction is not about ontology. — frank
:up:The inability of science to deal with the qualitative character of human experience is a feature not a bug. — Janus
Except that @Gnomon himself does just that ...No one would conflate gravity with God and no one should conflate the Enformer with God. — Agent Smith
... aka god-of-the-gaps (sophistry) :smirk:@Agent Smith
My position [Enformationism, BothAnd, Meta-Physics] is a kind of Deism, specifically PanEnDeism.
— Gnomon — 180 Proof
:lol:I can only say that Gnomon simply can't be a sophist. — Agent Smith
Death is not an event in life: we do not live to experience death. If we take eternity to mean not infinite temporal duration but timelessness, then eternal life belongs to those who live in the present. Our life has no end in the way in which our visual field has no limits. — Ludwig Wittgenstein
Of course.Do you mean to imply math-based scientific descriptions (maps) are (necessarily) incomplete? — Agent Smith
I suppose we should first question – speculate on – whether or not there is a "whole picture". For instance, the mathematical concept of infinity (re: continuum hypothesis?) implies there cannot be a "whole". There's also the ancient concept of the apeiron – endlessness – that radically calls "the whole" into question too. All it seems we can know it everything we can know is encompassed by an unsurpassable – transfinite? – horizon. Is that "nonscientific" enough for ya, amigo? :smirk:Shouldn't we then do something nonscientific? You know, to get the whole picture?
Math is formal grammar (i.e. logical syntax).Mathematics isn't just grammar, is it? :chin: — Agent Smith
Have you forgotten, Smith, that the only "model" (map) that "corresponds one-to-one with the physical world" (territory) is "the physical world" (territory) because map =/= territory?The math models seem to correspond one-to-one with the physical world.
:up:The Big Bang is not so much the beginning of the universe as it is an end of our [current scientific] understanding.
— Sean Carroll (physicist) — Agent Smith
... math is one step ahead of physics and also that at all scales, mathematical objects abound — Agent Smith
So Shakespeare's plays & sonnets can be "reduced to" Elizabethan-era grammar (which was "one step ahead" of the Bard)? :sweat:... physics, the be-all-and-end-all of science, can be reduced to mathematics ...
— Agent Smith
Maybe metaphysically, but not scientifically. — 180 Proof
