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ngill09
Guest
Let me be clear that there are two things in question here.ngill
It is one thing to attribute the unknown to the power of God. It is quite another to insist that what we do not presently understand must only have a supernatural explanation.
Well, for a religious person everything comes from God (including the mysterious laws of nature) and can be explained by God as its source. Your notion that we cannot attribute the laws of the universe to God lest it turns out that they can be otherwise explained by science is supported only by a belief that there is no God to support these laws.
Are you an atheist?
According to Newton, “God in the beginning formed matter in solid, massy, hard, impenetrable, movable particles, of such sizes and figures, and with such other properties, and in such proportion to space, as most conduced to the end for which he formed them.”
This exxplanation will be very uncomfortable for the atheist. How do you suppose the atheist would counter Newton’s explanation? That we don’t know yet how it all went down, but we shouldn’t bring God into the picture?
First is the proposition that because there is no natural explanation for a phenomenon, there can be no natural explanation for that phenomenon. This is the assertion in your quote from Isaac Newton regarding the motion of heavenly bodies in our solar system. He was proven wrong by Laplace - the stable motion of the heavenly bodies in our solar system can be explained entirely by natural forces. This is also the assertion being made in this thread regarding the origin of biological life. Because you do not understand how it can arise naturally, you assert that it cannot arise naturally. I suspect that in the future this assertion will be disproven just as Newton’s was. This is an unanswered question, and we should be very careful making declarations about the answer until more is known.
Second is the proposition that the physical constants of our universe exist improbably and must therefore exist by design. This probabilistic inference is made invalidly from one point of data. I would tentatively class the question of the probability of the specific values of the physical constants of our universe to be an unanswerable question, as to answer any question of probability would require observation of more than one universe.
The futility of this endeavor is illustrated by your attempt to explain the mysterious nature of the universe by attributing it to a God whose nature is also mysterious.
As to my own religious beliefs… I leave them ambiguous, since I’ve noticed a definite tendency on this forum of labeling people and attributing to them beliefs that they do not necessarily hold. I, despite never classifying myself under any belief system, have already found myself being attributed statements and assertions for which I’ve made absolutely no reference.****