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Hitetlen
Guest
I am aware of this line of reasoning. You call it convincing, I do not. It incorporates the fallacy of “popular induction”, meaning that “since all the elements of the universe need a cause outside itself, therefore the universe itself also needs a cause outside itself.”I didn’t say there are proofs of God’s existence in the strict sense of the word. Instead, there’s “actual knowledge” of God’s existence in the form of converging and convincing evidence which equates to a “preponderance of evidence” sufficient and reasonable to believe. Your nonsensical rejection of any evidence other than that which you experience personally severely limits your ability to attain knowledge of any sort, let alone knowledge about God. I suggest you don’t actually follow this epistemology, but only profess it for polemical reasons.
So I suggest you look beyond only that which is experimentally provable. There are some things we’ve come to know through science that cannot be experimentally proven, as for example, some experiments would require a particle accelorator the size of the earth. No funding seems available for that experiment.
Nontheless, we have scientific postulate which are reasonable based upon a preponderance of evidence. For example, everything which has a beginning, has a cause. We cannot prove this experimentally. However, we can infer this based upon what we do see come into existence.
Since scientists assert evidence that supports the conclusion that the universe has a beginning, then it appears that it has a cause, and that cause is external to the universe.
The concept that attributes of the elements can be transferred to the set which contains those elements is simply false. Just one example: the elements: “humans”; the attribute: “having a mother”; the aggregate (or set): “humanity”. True statement: “every human has a mother”. False induction: “therefore humanity has a mother”.
I am not saying that there are no examples where the set of elements share an attribute with the elements, it happens under certain circumstances. But your “prepondarance of evidence” assumes that this is a generic phenomenon, that every set of elements has an attribute which can be derived from the attribute shared by the elements. And this is simply false! So your “evidence” is worthless.
As for the universe being especially “friendly” to life, that is simply a joke. The universe is very hostile to life, we need a very narrow range of parameters, which are hospitable to life. Now some people who wish to shoehorn this into a “miraculous” event, saying that it required a supernatural intervention to allow for this to happen. (Observe, that this is actually the opposite of what you quoted.) This is nonsense. How would they know it? This is simply the “God of the gaps” in disguise: “we don’t know how a specific occurrence happened, therefore it must have a supernatural explanation”. Bah, humbug!Nobel-prize winning Physicist Arno Penzias*,* for example, wrote: “Astronomy leads us to a unique event, a universe which was created out of nothing, one with the very delicate balance needed to provide exactly the conditions required to permit life, and one which has an underlying (one might say ‘supernatural’) plan.” (Margenau, H and R.A. Varghese, ed. 1992. Cosmos, Bios, and Theos. La Salle, IL, Open Court, p. 83.)
This is just one of many converging clues to the existence of God.
Now, if you are intellectually honest, try to explain how the word “love” can be attributed to God, all the contrary evidence notwithstanding. What does the word “love” mean in this respect?