And the implementation and creation of gravity without any matter (as in Hawkings’ scenario) doesn’t require (a) God?
Again, I haven’t read the book, but both other writings of Hawking and other scientists advance the idea that our universe is part of a “cosmic landscape”, to use Leonard Susskind’s term, and our universe draws resources from that, Well, where did all
that come from, you might ask? No idea. But from our parochial perspective in this universe, it
looks like we popped out of nothing, since we can’t “see beyond”. We shouldn’t
expect to “see beyond”, though. It’s just human nature, narrative-centric beings that we are, to find that an irresistable temptation.
In any case, I can’t think of what any of these scenarios would require a God. A God doesn’t help this a bit. Say God made the universe, or the metaverse. You’re no better off – you now have to explain where God came from! If you suppose you’re not obligated to do that, then you’re better off not even bothering with this God meme, and just supposing that the universe or the metaverse is uncaused, uncreated, eternal, a brute fact in its own right, rather than God.
You gotta stop the regress somewhere, and God doesn’t help, and only makes things needlessly more complicated in terms of explanation. At least we can observe physics in action, and project that idea “outward” from our universe. Not so with God. God’s just there to fill a gap in our explanations.
And his theory seems to assume time was always running. How did time start?
Time is an integral part of the fabric of the universe – deeply related to dynamics (relativity). Where space/time/energy/matter exist, time exists as the “forward arrow” of events and interactions. It only runs as a function of activity in terms of spatial or energy changes. And that’s expressed only in the context of this universe. If a metaverse or “cosmic landscape” obtains beyond this universe, it may have it’s own time dynamics. For our universe, our local time began at t=0 and has been “running” since the Big Bang. But that’s just our frame of reference. For other universes, if such obtain, ostensibly, the fabric of those universes has its own local time running.
How is the Universe, the Galaxy, the Solar System, the Planet perfectly designed to support life, both single-cellular and multi-cellular?
Manifestly it isn’t. We are utterly without any evidence of such a designer, and the more we observe and learn, the more we understand that your phrasing has things backward, in much the same way ancient Bible writers had things mixed up about the fixity of the earth, and the sun rising, setting and “returning to its place”. Rather than the universe being designed for
us, which if you think about it for a minute really is a conceit humans indulge in, to frame it that way, intuitively, we are “designed for the universe”. That is, we exist as adaptations and optimized resolutions to physics as they are. The vast majority of the universe does not appear to support biological life, but where it does, there it grows. Physics in action.
How about the creation of Living Matter on Earth? And how and why did single-celled bacteria evolve into multi-cellular beings? There is certainly some intelligent designer, which we can presume to be God.
You can presume what you like, but it’s just not needed – it’s extraneous, as best we can tell. Does God need to get involved to have oxygen bond with hydrogen to make water? Maybe so, in your view. But that presumption is similarly superfluous – it’s not parsimonious and invokes resources and entities that aren’t needed. That’s your prerogative, but if we esteem parsimony as a knowledge building heuristic, it’s just not economical as an explanation.
I can recommend studying the conversion of Antony Flew for good info on the evidence for a creator God.
I’m well aware of Mr. Flew. This question is a kind of referendum on the human intuition; do we follow the evidence and the models, or do we follow our “gut”, and cleave to the part of our evolved psychology that has served us so well in other areas, the hyper-intentionality we deploy, seeing schemes, plans and (anthropic) designs all around us, whether they are there or not? I think at the end, Mr. Flew’s rigor simply faltered, and his intuitions prevailed in spite of the evidence. Just as you say “certainly” – a bald appeal to naked intuition if there ever was one – I think Mr. Flew adopted a late deism because it just “had to be”. The evidence Mr. Flew would rely on for some positive identification of a designer or God is as lacking as ever. What appears to have changed is his credulity.
We’re predisposed to think in terms of anthropic designs – that’s how we’ve survived and flourished to the present day. But evolution doesn’t really punish us much for our fanciful delusions. A deer is skittish because it’s better to have a “false positive”, and suppose that rustling in the grass it just heard was a lurking predator than to risk missing the presence of a predator and being eaten.
The deer has a natural, and so far as it goes, “rational” bias towards paranoia. It’s frequently mistaken, but better to error on the side of caution. For humans, something similar seems to obtain. We profit immensely from thinking in terms of narratives, schemes and designs. It produces lots of errors, but mostly ones that are good tradeoffs, errors we can survive and thrive with.
-TS