Matthias123:
So even if our universe is tunneling into existance, it is not tunneling from nothingness per se.
No one is arguing that the universe came from “nothingness.” No one knows what happened before the Big Bang. It is possible that whatever “stuff” was around before the Big Bang always existed, whether or not it’s ever expanded before (again, if it makes sense to speak of a “before” in this context).
The fact is that oscillating models are contrary to empirical evidence that show that not only is the expansion of the universe not slowing down, but it is accelerating.
No one is arguing that we are necessarily in a universe that will “Big Crunch” one day. Yes, it seems that this particular expansion is speeding up and not slowing down – perhaps this universe is the only expansion that the pre-Big-Bang “stuff” has ever had. Maybe it’s expanded before into different universes that
did Big-Crunch. Maybe not. Maybe, maybe, maybe. Nobody knows.
So lets have faith in mechanical causes, but not in the truths of God?
No. Let’s get rid of the puerile idea of “faith,” and let’s see where the evidence points. When there’s not enough evidence to form a conclusion, let’s be honest and say “we don’t know.”
This [the fine-turning argument] is not used to prove the existance of God, this is used as evidence for the existence of God.
…which, as I demonstrated with the bridge hand analogy, does not suggest the intervention of an intelligent force directing the cards. I’ll repeat: just because something is unlikely, occurs anyway, and is valued by you, it in no way suggests that it is any more likely that an intelligent force made it happen.
I really do enjoy hearing atheists speak about the big bang
And I really do enjoy hearing believers assert that “we don’t know” really means that supernatural explanations are more likely.
itinerant1:
In keeping with the recognition of individual tastes there is a standard.
And who gets to decide that standard? You? The culture you grew up in? I dare say that cultural standards of beauty are quite different in other cultures (the African trbe that does the “lip discs” and other body modifications comes immediately to mind)
If there were no standard then anything whatsoever, regardless of how deformed, stinking putrid and ugly could qualify as beautiful.
And yet that is indeed the case – different people find different things beautiful, even things that seem putrid and ugly to others (the “lip disc” example is indeed applicable here).
And this is to make nonsense of the aesthetic experience.
It doesn’t – it just means that the experience of the “beautiful” is a
value judgment. What a culture or individual considers beautiful might give us insights into the individual or the culture, but it has nothing to do with there being some kind of objective “standard” of beauty.
I agree that there might be some things that are almost universally regarded as beautiful because the makeup of our brains tends to respond to these things in similar ways – hence, it’s possible to talk broadly of things that will be, in general, found beautiful by people: symmetry, the mixing of certain shades, etc. But such things are not always universally regarded in this way – and certainly specific works of art are not always universally regarded as beautiful – and it is to utterly confuse the issue to attempt to see “beauty” as anything other than a judgment by a human consciousness.
Andrew:
First of all, hope you had a nice Canadian Thanksgiving. You write:
You aver of human suffering that there is nothing deeper involved but that hey bad things happen. Now to hold such a view I would argue is extremely naive if one has somewhat studied Human History.
Bad things happen. Things that I, on the basis of my values, personally despise and hate – like genocides – happen. Where’s the “deeper” part?
I believe it to be eminently unreasonable to not acknowledge that there is objective good and that there is evil.
But just because one recognizes that morality doesn’t exist doesn’t mean that one suddenly stops having values.
Your argument consists of just insisting over and over again that good and evil are “objective.” They’re not. This is similar to the nonsense of insisting that beauty is “objective.” It’s simply not.
These words are expressions of values, nothing more and nothing less.
Look, if you’re insisting that these words refer to “objective” things, your arguments are all going to boil down to “What’s beautiful is what I say is beautiful, and what’s good is what I say is good, and anybody who disagrees is just wrong.” As an example, I pointed out earlier that some people find pain and rape beautiful, and I was told that such people are “clearly wrong.” But just declaring that people are “wrong” for a subjective value judgment is completely and totally unconvincing. What if I told you that you’re “clearly wrong” for finding a sunset beautiful? Obviously, that wouldn’t convince you – I can’t argue away a feeling that you have – because these questions of “good” or “beauty” are subjective value judgments that usually can’t be argued away.
[an exception might be if my arguments led you to see the object in question in a different way, one that now strikes your subjective values as “ugly” or at least “not beautiful” in some way – but still, it’s your values that are making the judgment, not some standard outside of yourself]
Now, my values might lead me to want a world in which, for example, elderly members of society are respected and cared for – perhaps not the least because I have personal relationships with some elderly people and/or expect to be elderly myself some day. So I might be driven to contribute to efforts to respect and care for the elderly –
not out of a sense that there’s some “objective” value and greatness to human life or some “objective” moral imperative, but out of my
values.
Here’s the thing: someone else might have values that drive him to not care about the elderly or even actively oppose efforts to care for them.
There’s nothing objectively “evil” about this – it’s merely a point of view that I might
hate and oppose.
And that’s really it – there’s only the actions people take and the way people feel about actions, all driven by values. The only “argument” you could possibly mount in opposition to this is repeatedly insisting, in shriller and shriller tones, that “evil” exists objectively. Maybe you’ll throw in an appeal to emotion for good measure, too, and bring up crippled children and wounded puppies. But obviously, repeatedly insisting something isn’t a convincing argument.