You haven't shown a better explanation, do you have one?Huh??
Rather: we shouldn't be concerned with "explanations" that explain exactly nothing.
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You haven't shown a better explanation, do you have one?Huh??
Rather: we shouldn't be concerned with "explanations" that explain exactly nothing.
From the Wiki article on a fine-tuned universe: (note: you should be able to click on the citation link numbers to access reference.)You haven't shown a better explanation, do you have one?
The question is not whether or not fine tuning is real, it is, but why?
the universe looks suspiciously like a fix.
To be precise, we know that if the constants were different, there wouldn´t be life as we know it -yes.We know about fine tuning as well.
Sure we know how gravity works.And we don't have an explanation on how gravity works.
Rick, as far as I can tell, claims that you have to demonstrate how causation works, if you claim that it is the cause of something.Rick is trying to claim that we have to demonstrate the cause of something to allow it to be evidence to support a hypothesis when that is simple not true and Gravity is an example.
That´s why I didn´t say we "truly" understand "everything" about it.If we truly understood how gravity works then we would be able to tell everything there is to know about, say, black holes, but we cannot.
So one universe gives rise to other universes. I got that from the synopsis already. I'm looking for something a bit deeper. Does he go with the black hole idea, the quantum fluctuations idea, or something else?While he makes it clear that much of his ideas are speculation he views the universe unlike anyone else. His theory is a cosmological evolution. A universe somehow sticks and evolves and becomes the parent universe to its offspring which will have the original parameters with modification. He feels this would explain the fine tuning. He is a deep thinker and of course I see problems with his theory scientifically as well as personally but he is interesting to read and I believe quite honest and forthright in his openness to his theory being speculative. He does grant that God is a valid option just not scientific and that is why his theory he feels is more scientific because it can be tested and falsified.
That´s why I didn´t say we "truly" understand "everything" about it. We do understand enough about it so not to feel the need to evade to "Goddidit" as a replacement for an actual explanation.
From what´s been presented so far, there is no explanation whatsoever as to how God fine-tuned the universe.
Priest says that if the constants could not have been different then fine tuning fails; fails because it makes the probability 1. Ok, but even if that is true, he nor anyone else knows if they could not have been different thus fine tuning until proven to not being able to be anything but what they are stands.From the Wiki article on a fine-tuned universe: (note: you should be able to click on the citation link numbers to access reference.)
Counter arguments
Mark Colyvan, Jay Garfield and Graham Priest (2005) have argued that a theistic explanation for fine tuning is faulted due to fallacious probabilistic reasoning.[45]
First of all the Anthropic Principal doesn't discount fine tuning or explain it.Mathematician Michael Ikeda and astronomer William H. Jefferys have argued that the anthropic principle and selection effect are not properly taken into account in the fine tuning argument for a designer, and that in taking them into account, fine tuning does not support the designer hypothesis.[46][47] Philosopher of science Elliott Sober makes a similar argument.[48]
Richard Carrier is wrong and has been critiqued by Luke Barnes.Richard Carrier utilized the work of Ikeda, Jefferys, and Sober, in a Bayesian analysis. He concludes that fine tuning is strong evidence against the existence of God.[49]
Physicist Robert L. Park has also criticized the theistic interpretation of fine-tuning:
If the universe was designed for life, it must be said that it is a shockingly inefficient design. There are vast reaches of the universe in which life as we know it is clearly impossible: gravitational forces would be crushing, or radiation levels are too high for complex molecules to exist, or temperatures would make the formation of stable chemical bonds impossible... Fine-tuned for life? It would make more sense to ask why God designed a universe so inhospitable to life.[50]
Stenger has had his arguments refuted by other physicists as well.Victor Stenger argues that "The fine-tuning argument and other recent intelligent design arguments are modern versions of God-of-the-gaps reasoning, where a God is deemed necessary whenever science has not fully explained some phenomenon".[23] Stenger argues that science may provide an explanation if a Theory of Everything is formulated, which he says may reveal connections between the physical constants. A change in one physical constant may be compensated by a change in another, suggesting that the apparent fine-tuning of the universe is a fallacy because, in hypothesizing the apparent fine-tuning, it is mistaken to vary one physical parameter while keeping the others constant.[51]
So? What does that have to do with the scientific phenomena of fine tuning?IF "fine tuning is real" THEN IT FOLLOWS YEC criticism against radioactive dating methods is incorrect SINCE the YEC criticisms against radioactive dating methods is based on the idea that "fine tuning is NOT real" and can be manipulated with and still sustain the universe (as we know it).
How do you personally determine how the universe looks?No it does not, it is an opinion it does look like a fix. To me the universe looks like it looks.
Forgive me for not finding this argument convincing when the majority of astrophysicists, physicists, and cosmologists have more to go on than what you are pretending they are going on.To say it is a fix, is like saying a stone you find on the ground is fixed to look like it looks. It is a nonsense claim. Why things looks the way they do may or may not be something we can explain. Why the universe "looks like it looks" nobody knows and therefore we cannot say it is fine tuned. In addition the "fine tuning" claim is hardly the only attempt to try explain its "looks".
1. Does the universe have special "configuration values"? Yes....what are configuration values?Do the universe have special "configuration values"? Yes.
Are these values fine tuned? We do not know.
Do we have sufficient reason to believe these values must be fine tuned? No.
Citation?Oh, I found the actual probability calculation. As a fun critical thinking exercise, see what flaws you can spot:
"I now sketch the calculation of the probability that a universe with randomly chosen values of the parameters of the standard model will have stars that live for billions of years. We may begin with the six masses involved-the Planck mass, the masses of the four stable particles, and the mass associated with the cosmological constant. To ask how probable they are we must consider their ratios. To do this we will consider the largest, which is the Planck mass, to be fixed, and express the others in terms of units of that mass. Each of the others is then some number between zero and one. Let us assume God created the universe by throwing dice, and so chose these numbers randomly"
I'll even give a hint by giving an analogous "calculation". Look at the ratios between the central black hole of our galaxy, the sun, the earth, and a rock I'm holding. As he did, assume the largest is fixed, Now, for me to be holding the rock, the ratio between the roc and the milkyway black hole must be less than ~1^-38. For me to be able to support my own weight, to support my own body weight i can't very well be bigger than the other of ~ 1^-33, and so on. See the issue?
Black holes, his ideas do differ from others however.So one universe gives rise to other universes. I got that from the synopsis already. I'm looking for something a bit deeper. Does he go with the black hole idea, the quantum fluctuations idea, or something else?
Right.To be precise, we know that if the constants were different, there wouldn´t be life as we know it -yes.
We observe how gravity behaves and affects other things.Sure we know how gravity works.
What doesn't need a cause?Rick, as far as I can tell, claims that you have to demonstrate how causation works, if you claim that it is the cause of something.
We do can explain how gravity causes its effects. Nobody, however, has claimed that gravity has a single cause or something. (That´s btw. another absurdity about the alleged axiom "everything needs a cause").
You haven't shown a better explanation, do you have one?
Exactly.We observe how gravity behaves and affects other things.
Well, e.g. when I grab my guitar and play, that usually doesn´t have a cause. It´s the result of a complex process.What doesn't need a cause?
I understand that. However, when I posited "God" as the "correct" answer to "What caused gravity" the religionist I was talking to called that a joke and pointed out that this assertion didn´t explain anything about gravity.I fully agree with this statement. However, I wanted to point out that when we say we (do not) understand something we may mean different things. In discussion with theists, an understanding often implies getting answers to "why" or "what" questions. Such as "why do gravity exists" or "what is gravity" these question can be formulated as "how" questions, such as "how is gravity caused". Answer such question might give the impression we understand gravity, and for some people such answer is good enough and it feels not fruitful to ask further questions - but for other it is not.
Others might have a lingering feeling the questions is not fully answered in the respect that the answer only address causes and effects but it does not actually explain what the essence of gravity is. In that respect it is correct to say we do not understand gravity, and imo, it is that lack of understanding of the essence of things (which we probably also never will understand) that some people feel uneasy with and likes to fill in with something - anything - like a deity.
So what are those finer details of gravity they are looking for, and how´s that relevant to the "fine-tuning" thing?So maybe, your statement that we understand gravity does not actually address the actually questions the person might have. And by just saying "you are incorrect", you may miss the finer details in what they try to convey.
Sorry, gotta disagree. Just positing there´s a cause and giving it a fancy name isn´t the description of a mechanism, nor is it an explanation.If you don't have a mechanism (a cause, such a force, the finger of god, leprechauns or whatever) then you don't have an explanation.
That I agree with - except that Oncedeceived starts by pretending to use "fine-tuned" in a way that doesn´t imply a cause, but is just an observation ("if the constants were slightly different, there wouldn´t be life as we know it"), and then miraculously moves on to postulate the need for a "fine-tuner". That´s the gap (actually caused by false equivocation) that renders her argument void.If you don't have an explanation then you cannot say you know. So based on what you say they said, it means they do not know if the universe is fine-tuned by God or not, but not only that, it also implies they do not know if the universe is fine tuned in the first place (since it is not known from where the claimed fine-tuning is caused by - if exists at all - and claiming it is caused by a force, the finger of god, leprechauns, random chance, "it must be" so or whatever is just that; a claim). And that is pretty much where the actual knowledge about the "fine tuned" universe is right now; nobody knows what the case is.
Sure, that´s the beauty of metaphysics: You can dream up stuff without the risk of it being falsified.Imo, trying to explain things we don't even know happen or exists is just mental gymnastic in the higher athletic school, i.e. not science but philosophy. And anyone can be a philosopher - that is any one can make up things.
So? What does that have to do with the scientific phenomena of fine tuning?
How do you personally determine how the universe looks?
Forgive me for not finding this argument convincing when the majority of astrophysicists, physicists, and cosmologists have more to go on than what you are pretending they are going on.
1. Does the universe have special "configuration values"? Yes....what are configuration values?
2. Are these values fine tuned? We do not know. ... We do know, otherwise we would be here discussing it.
3. Do we have sufficient reason to believe these values must be fine tuned? No.....Yes.
The majority of scientists in this field agree the universe is fine tuned.
You said you read the book. It should be at least familiar enough to you to recognize the actual math you are citing.Citation?