G
Glark
Guest
I don’t know. What do you mean by “metaphysically”?Are you saying that it’s metaphysically impossible or extremely unlikely?
I don’t know. What do you mean by “metaphysically”?Are you saying that it’s metaphysically impossible or extremely unlikely?
Is this a joke question?But what would the universe look like if God didn’t exist
What does “ontologically impossible” mean?In the same way that a square-triangle can’t exist. Are you saying that It’s ontologically impossible for it to happen by chance…
sigh… Lets just say that i mean there is no possibility of it happening. If a thing is in principle possible, then no matter how unlikely it is, it might actually happen given the right conditions.ontologically impossible
Is it possible you’re just trying to sound smart ?Glark:![]()
sigh… Lets just say that i mean there is no possibility of it happening. If a thing is in principle possible, then no matter how unlikely it is, it might actually happen given the right conditions.ontologically impossible
Thank you for using clear, non-ambiguous language. Any living organism is a stupendously functionally-complex machine. Machines are not known to build themselves, so the idea of a very, very complex machine building itself is absolutely absurd and therefore unscientific.sigh… Lets just say that i mean there is no possibility of it happening. If a thing is in principle possible, then no matter how unlikely it is, it might actually happen given the right conditions.
Lol. I forget that some people might not be acquainted with these words. Having been exposed to them myself i tend to use them a lot.Is it possible you’re just trying to sound smart ?
Are you a dentist? I think an ontologist is someome who works with teeth.Lol. I forget that some people might not be acquainted with these words. Having been exposed to them myself i tend to use them a lot.
LolAre you a dentist? I think an ontologist is someome who works with teeth.
Neither do i want to exist without God. If the impossible happened and God was proven to not exist, then i would prefer to have never been born.I like your name, btw, “IWantGod”. That’s nice. I want God too. I also need God. Without the Lord, I don’t even want to live.
It depends on what you mean by building itself. If certain chemical reactions lead to complex structures, this is just things acting according to their nature… The fact that it happens by a process of secondary causes is what makes it “natural”, and natural events is the domain of science. There is certainly a philosophical argument to be said here. We can say that such events regardless of them being natural only make sense if the first cause is an intelligent-cause. All this would mean is that God chooses to create through the process of secondary causes and is the one that gives physical reality its nature or natural powers.Any living organism is a stupendously functionally-complex machine. Machines are not known to build themselves, so the idea of a very, very complex machine building itself is absolutely absurd and therefore unscientific.
If I understand Glark’s reading of Genesis, God did a bit of a shandy. Brought the universe to a curious state using the natural processes (perhaps starting with a Big Bang?), where there was an earth with light but no Sun, and then used the ‘snap the fingers’ model over 6 days to complete the job. You’ve gotta ask 2, no, make that 3, questions:All this would mean is that God chooses to create through the process of secondary causes and is the one that gives physical reality its nature or natural powers.
Fair enough. I didn’t want to accuse you from arguing from ignorance again without your say so.Bradskii:![]()
…it is obvious to me…So what process do you use to differentiate something that is a miracle (something that doesn’t result from natural process, like, I dunno…magic) and something
And it is obvious that the reverse is then equally true. Although I thought it might have taken a couple more posts to get to that point.Bradskii:![]()
I think you are begging the question. Either God did create the universe and, therefore, it looks like what it does today. Or, he didn’t and therefore it looks like what it does today. You can’t assume God is NOT involved simply because the universe looks the way it does. That would be a case of viciously circular reasoning…HarryStotle:![]()
But what would the universe look like if God didn’t exist. All the evidence points it to looking exactly like it does right now.Again, “all the forensics” do not point to a Godless or unguided universe, so your analogy simply fails.
The fine tuning argument says explicitly that umpteen parameters are required to be exactly set in a very specific and detailed way. Any variation will result in a universe in which we could not live. God doesn’t come into the argument at that point. It is generally asked that one accepts the initial proposition first.You are right that God could have setup the initial parameters differently. But I don’t see it follows from that to your conclusion that an omnipotent God means the fine tuning argument does not work. Because the fine tuning argument starts off not assuming there is a God but looking at the probability of the constants being the way they are and concludes it is likely they are that way because of a intelligent designer. So it still leads to an intelligent designer.
This is where you lose me by saying God had no choice in order for the fine tuning argument to work. If God setup the initial design criteria that led to the need to have the constants at the values they are then he did have a choice in the beginning. But once the parameters were set up then it had to be made accordingly with those parameters in mind. So while the constants need to be where they are there was a choice prior to that.If God had not set things up in a very specific way, you would not be here. In other words, for the argument to hold water, God had no choice in how to set things up.
Oh snap! lol. The author thought there was a sea in the air.“And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament: and it was so. And God called the firmament Heaven” (Genesis 1)