GrowingSmaller
Muslm Humanist
I am fallible. There's no sign of God. I may be wrong, so therefore I am not looking hard enough.
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The earth, or the universe? Because there's someone on the forums right now arguing, to and beyond exhaustion, that the universe was finely tuned for life. I'd argue the positions are mutually exclusive.'Fine-tuned for life' is simply the idea that the Earth is unique in it's design and purpose, having a very questionably rare paradigm of events and workings for life to prevail.
There's no scientific proof of alien existence, and the Fermi paradox, though attempting to be tackled recently, is still a problem for astrophysics and mathematics- there is something obviously off about the notion the universe should be filled with life.
Here´s hoping you are more careful and attentive when you read and interprete the bible than when you read and interpreted my OP.Quatona, is the universe too big for you or something?
However, the "fine-tuned/designed for life" argument rests on the idea that an incredibly huge, complex universe is required for sustaining a tiny bit of life in an incredibly small and insignificant spot in this universe.
Well, you have become a member of a discussion board the purpose of which is to talk with other people.You talk pretty big for such an insignificant number atoms.
Why should we ponder your question when we have clusters
of galaxies that are much bigger in size.....to chat with?
This is not the teleological argument. It seems you have a misunderstanding of what a defense of the argument entails and what it does not. I am a proponent of the argument and am willing to discuss it if you are open to accepting the conclusion.
The teleological or fine-tuning argument is an argument for the hypothesis that the fine-tuning observed in the cosmos is due to design. The argument attempts to show that the competing hypotheses i.e. chance and necessity cannot adequately account for the fine-tuning observed in the universe and that therefore
, the fine-tuning is due to design because there are only three hypotheses that can account for the fine-tuning. They are: chance, necessity, and design.
Lots of criticism of the "fine-tuning/design"-arguments have been given in countless threads.
Here I´d like to focus on just one point that I can´t seem to be able to make sense of:
One token of (good, intelligent) design is elegance and parsimony.
However, the "fine-tuned/designed for life" argument rests on the idea that an incredibly huge, complex universe is required for sustaining a tiny bit of life in an incredibly small and insignificant spot in this universe.
Doesn´t look like good design to me, sorry. Unparsimonous to the max and full of redundancy.
Unless, of course, this huge, complex system was necessary for life to be able to exist. Which raises the question: What powers did the designer have? What were the pre-existing conditions that he had to accept as given, and with which he could just fiddle around? What about those often-cited "constants" - did he actually create/invent them, or were they something that already existed and that he had to accept as given?
So what am I supposed to believe, exactly? That there was a creator who created conditions, laws, constants and other such stuff, and then there was a designer who tweaked these until life was possible?
Or do you actually refer to an omnipotent ex-nihilo-creator as a "designer" - in which case he certainly could have simply created life directly - without creating the fact that a huge universe is required for there to be some life, along with it.