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Some say that Occam’s Razor inclines against the hypothesis that God exists. Of these, some believe in God anyway and others don’t for whatever reasons.
Occam’s Razor is that one should prefer the theory that makes the least assumptions all other things being equal.
For our discussion, let’s grant that all other things are equal and that an atheistic theory of the world explains as much and as well as a theistic theory of the world. Still, Occam’s Razor does not incline against the God hypothesis. Here’s why.
Let’s suppose there is a successful theory of everything. One might think amending that theory to include God would be against Occam’s Razor. However, even with a successful theory of everything, we have no explanation as to what accounts for why the laws and/or initial conditions of physics were this way and not some other way. We have no explanation for example of why there is something rather than just nothing. The atheistic theory can tackle this by saying that the way things happen to be need no explaining and just are – that the universe or the laws behind it are the ultimate mystery, not a god. But, in doing so, the theory has added another assumption – namely that the universe is the ultimate mystery that needs no explaining – so compared to a theory that assumes that there is some other ultimate mystery, they both fare exactly the same under Occam’s Razor.
Another way for the atheistic theory to tackle this is to instead say that everything that is possible exists, somewhat similar to a Leibnizian principle of plenitude without its value laden hiearchy. An MIT theorist has gone this route, identifying the universe with mathematics and saying that anything mathematically possible exists. But in going this route they have added assumptions – namely the assumption that everything possible exists and the assumption that the fact that everything possible exists needs no explanining but is part of an ultimate mystery.
There may be good arguments against the God hypothesis, but Occam’s Razor is not one of them.
Occam’s Razor is that one should prefer the theory that makes the least assumptions all other things being equal.
For our discussion, let’s grant that all other things are equal and that an atheistic theory of the world explains as much and as well as a theistic theory of the world. Still, Occam’s Razor does not incline against the God hypothesis. Here’s why.
Let’s suppose there is a successful theory of everything. One might think amending that theory to include God would be against Occam’s Razor. However, even with a successful theory of everything, we have no explanation as to what accounts for why the laws and/or initial conditions of physics were this way and not some other way. We have no explanation for example of why there is something rather than just nothing. The atheistic theory can tackle this by saying that the way things happen to be need no explaining and just are – that the universe or the laws behind it are the ultimate mystery, not a god. But, in doing so, the theory has added another assumption – namely that the universe is the ultimate mystery that needs no explaining – so compared to a theory that assumes that there is some other ultimate mystery, they both fare exactly the same under Occam’s Razor.
Another way for the atheistic theory to tackle this is to instead say that everything that is possible exists, somewhat similar to a Leibnizian principle of plenitude without its value laden hiearchy. An MIT theorist has gone this route, identifying the universe with mathematics and saying that anything mathematically possible exists. But in going this route they have added assumptions – namely the assumption that everything possible exists and the assumption that the fact that everything possible exists needs no explanining but is part of an ultimate mystery.
There may be good arguments against the God hypothesis, but Occam’s Razor is not one of them.