lol. I just need to do even more of that checking before clicking the 'post' button. I make so many typos that some do turn out funny tho.Subtle (and very deep) pun?
Alan Turing - Wikipedia
But your initial response did not make me think you were a believer in God. I had to check your religious affliation in order to know that. My point here is that you should have said, “I do not think this is a good argument for God, I prefer this one instead.”
Actually there is another idea that is proposed that scientists have used to counter the finely tuned universe and that is the multiverse. So our precise universe is just one of many that have varying physics. There may be other universes that have slighly different outcomes that still produced life and there may be another you and me living a slighly different life. There may be universes with hostile conditions and still others where there is just darkness and relatively nothing.Im gonna quote Oxford University and Nobel prize winner, and mathematical physicist Roger Penrose:
“Try to imagine phase space… of the entire universe. Each point in this phase space represents a different possible way that the universe might have started off. We are to picture the Creator, armed with a ‘pin’ — which is to be placed at some point in phase space… Each different positioning of the pin provides a different universe. Now the accuracy that is needed for the Creator’s aim depends on the entropy of the universe that is thereby created. It would be relatively ‘easy’ to produce a high entropy universe, since then there would be a large volume of the phase space available for the pin to hit. But in order to start off the universe in a state of low entropy — so that there will indeed be a second law of thermodynamics — the Creator must aim for a much tinier volume of the phase space. How tiny would this region be, in order that a universe closely resembling the one in which we actually live would be the result?”
“His calculations lead him to the remarkable conclusion that the ‘Creator’s aim’ must have been accurate to 1 part in 10 to the power of 10 to the power or 123, that is 1 followed by 10 to the 123rd power zeros.”
As Penrose puts it, that is a “number which it would be impossible to write out in the usual decimal way, because even if you were able to put a zero on every particle in the universe, there would not even be enough particles to do the job.”
And the only alternative to the universe arising from chance is for it to have arisen deliberately. Deliberate action requires a conscious creator aka God.
That's not clear. Specific models that imply multiple universes might make predictions about those universes that can be tested. There might also be influences between "nearby" universes that could be detected.NB both ideas can never be scientifically verified.
As opposed to people who base their behavior on their own emotional state at any given time. No potential problems there, nosirree!What they maybe terrified of are people that base their behavior based on what their version of God expects of them.
Like everything else, events Just Happen.Unlike dragons events like 9/11 can ruin your day.
Like everything else, events Just Happen.
You understand that is your perspective of it ? If they are atheists they are as terrified of idea of god then they are of dragons attacking them when they go jogging.
What they maybe terrified of are people that base their behavior based on what their version of God expects of them.
Unlike dragons events like 9/11 can ruin your day.
As opposed to people who base their behavior on their own emotional state at any given time. No potential problems there, nosirree!
Jonathan Walkerin said: ↑
What they maybe terrified of are people that base their behavior based on what their version of God expects of them.
Unlike dragons events like 9/11 can ruin your day.
Atheistic regimes murdered more than all other religions combined.
9/11 was committed by religious men who thought the God Who spoke to Abraham wanted them to do it.
Which has what do do with Christianity?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?