R
rossum
Guest
My apologies for not making myself clearer. I was arguing solely about the Fine Tuning claim. If something is fine tuned, then we can make reasonable deductions from that.Your argument is an “in principle” argument that designed things are “in principle” better if they need no further intervention.
Something may be designed without being fine tuned. The claim to possess fine tuning limits the range of possibilities. Finding something outside that range will refute the claim of fine tuning, though it may not refute the more general claim of design. A piece of sloppy design, like an ill-fitting suit, would refute the claim of a fine-tuned suit from a master tailor, but would not refute the claim of a sloppy design from an unskilled tailor.
If the universe is designed by God, then it is God who constrains the universe, not the other way round. Since biology is part of the universe, then on that scenario all of biology is constrained by God. The discussion then becomes whether God constrained biology at the moment of the Big Bang, and has let it run its course since then or whether He has intervened since then. If He has intervened to shift molecules around, then we would expect to see material evidence of His actions. Just as people look for material evidence (or not) of the Genesis Flood.Aren’t you treating the universe as if it were some huge clockwork machine? Why does God need to be constrained in that way?
They could have been. With an omnimax deity there are an infinite number of possibilities. What evidence can you show to reduce the number of possible hypotheses?Why couldn’t the universe and creatures in it have been created with some measure of spontaneity, chance or dependency built into them with God tending them along the way?
rossum