We can recognize human design, for the most part.
It's not clear to me we would also recognize alien design.
But here's the thing... if we recognize design, we would simply call it designed and not an appearance of design.
And we recognize design primarily by signs of manufacturing.
We need quite some knowledge about the natural world to be able to do that as well.
Some things are obvious, others are not and some things are simply unrecognisable as being designed.
The universe bares no signs of manufacturing. At all.
And, to repeat myself, "appearance" is by definition a subjective opinion.
What may appear as X to you, doesn't necessarily appear as X to me.
It does show signs of design, that is why the term fine tuning was chosen for the label of the phenomena. It appears that the 30 parameters that must be precisely what they are were set to be that way. The fact that it is recognized as if someone or something tuned them in the way they needed to be to create a universe and intelligent life within it.
What aspects would that be?
See above.
I'm not making any assertions. I'm responding to YOUR assertion.
No, you are responding with your own. You have no evidence that prohibits a fine tuner.
What claim??
You claimed that "scientists consider it a valid argument".
I responded with the fact that it's quite easy to find scientists that don't.
I retract that. I didn't mean to say that all scientist think it is a valid argument. I should have said some scientists.
I'm pointing out, once more, how cherry picking you are when it comes to your fallacious arguments of authority.
You praise all scientists you think agree with your view, while ignoring all those who clearly don't.
I have provided two arguments using scientist's arguments. The first is for the fine tuning of the universe. The consensus is that fine tuning is real. I argued with quotes from Einstein to counter your remark that he was an atheist. So what exactly have I cherry picked other than what I just retracted.
You said: "you claimed that they did have evidence that would show God didn't do it."
In the above quote, I'm not making such a claim at all.
It seems you think that a person can only become an atheist if, and only if, they have evidence that excludes a god from creating the universe. This is beyond ridiculous.
It seems I caught you red-handed strawmanning me.
You haven't clarified what you meant yet.
Except that we do. If you wish to claim that it was pre-planned, we do. If you wish to claim that the values could have been different, we do. If you wish to make ANY CLAIM whatsoever about how the values are assigned/obtained, you do.
Just like there is no reason to believe that they could.
That's kind of the thing with the unknown.... it isn't known.
If the values couldn't have been different that makes the design even more convincing. If the universe could not have been different it would be even more fine tuned.
It's not valid. Values being what they are could have all kinds of reasons:
- an infinite amount of universes with different values, it's inevitable that one like ours exists
- an infinite amount of universes, all with the same values, because they might not be able to have any other value
So? What if there were infinite mounts of universe with the same or different values? How would that eliminate the fine tuning?
- just this universe with the values it has, because they might not be able to be any different
- just this universe with the values it has by pure coincidence: they might be able to have different values, so the universe would end up having SOME configuartion, and this particular configuration is just as likely as any other configuration
- just this universe with the values it has by pure probability: they might be able to have different values, but with these values being some kind of "hot spot", so the universe would end up having SOME configuartion, and this particular configuration is actually more likely then other configurations.
1. Makes it more fine tuned.
2. No scientist believes the parameters happened by sheer coincidence.
3. There is no reason why this configuration is more likely then others we don't have others to show that.
- .......
There's an inumerable amount of possible explanation. And the values being what they are don't point to any specific one.
You are just going on and on about a tuner, only because your a priori religious beliefs. Your religion requires you to believe in a tuner. It's not because of supposed "evidence". It's because of religious dogma.
As for me, I leave all options open and am happy saying "I don't know" while experts in the field are trying to find out.
First of all, I have said very little about a fine tuner so claiming I've gone on and on is a straw man. Secondly, my "religion" doesn't require anything but to accept Jesus Christ as my Savior. One and only requirement. Lastly, it is because of evidence that is the whole point and the fact that you deny any evidence supporting a fine tuner out right shows your anti-religious dogma very clearly.
That's just not true, because your "design" argument requires assumptions that aren't justified or supported.
Even right out the gates, the obvious big assumption is the existence of an unsupported entity you like to call "god".
Occam's razor.
Right, one explanation...one God vs. infinite universes. I think the one God fits best with Occam's razor.
The explanation with the least unfounded assumptions is the most likely one.
Consider this...
I leave my house and the tv is intact.
I come back home a couple hours later and the tv is smashed to pieces.
Which is most likely:
- some human entered my house and smashed my tv
or
- an extra-dimensional alien appeared in my living room and smashed my tv.
Both are, strictly speaking, "possible".
Which is most likely? And why?
I would agree that it is most likely a human did it, it may have been a cat or a dog if one is in the house. But that is a reasonable assumption.
If you went to the beach and found pebbles in small piles spelling out "peace on earth" would you think that they just happened there by chance or would you assume some intelligent being spelled it out?
It's not about "liking" it or not. It's about unfounded assumption upon unfounded assumption resulting in an extremely poor and fallacious argument.
Also, the projection in that quote is kind of hilarious...
How is it a fallacious argument? What do you think makes it so?
You keep saying this.....
Hawking, for one, disagrees.
So does Krauss.
But I'm sure they are just "rebels against god" who "just want to sin", so that's the reason why they reject your god-argument, I bet.
Why do you feel they are free from bias when they have made it very clear they are atheists? Do you believe that they would not want to have science eliminate God from being an option?
ow my........
genuine scientific hypothesis vs faith based god-arguments....
But the hypothesis is what is attempting to "explain it away".... my, my.
I've heard scientists admit it.
And I'm saying you're wrong and have explained why it's wrong on countless occasions.
No, you haven't explained why I'm wrong. You have asserted I'm wrong.