- Within the framework of Design there is an element of Chance
Only if you interpret Scripture literally.
Whether this is just you or Catholics generally I don’t know.
Whether it is or not is irrelevant.
The OT sees what you call chance as the impartiality of God: The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is from the LORD. – Proverbs 16:33
“from” does not imply "
directly willed by God". Otherwise He would be directly responsible for disasters like the Mexican earthquake.
This is also explicit in the NT. When the apostles need an impartial decision, they use chance to consult the Lord in the tradition of the priests:
Then they prayed, “Lord, you know everyone’s heart. Show us which of these two you have chosen to take over this apostolic ministry, which Judas left to go where he belongs.” Then they cast lots, and the lot fell to Matthias; so he was added to the eleven apostles. – Acts 1:24-26
**One **incident is insufficient to establish that **all **chance events are
directly willed by God. The Apostles may well have been inspired to cast lots. Even if they weren’t inspired they weren’t infallible!
In scripture, and (I think) all Christianity, everything that happens is due to God and His creatures, and these are the** only** agents, there cannot be any separate agency such as chance.
How would you justify that assumption?
- In this context Chance means coincidences caused by the interplay of the laws of nature
- Coincidences are often unforeseen and unpredictable by human beings
.
- These coincidences are often dysteleological, i.e. opposed to the purposes of Design
- In an immensely complex universe such coincidences are inevitable
- Such misfortunes can be prevented by suspending the laws of nature
- To suspend the laws of nature too frequently would undermine the order and predictability of events
- A rational existence is impossible without order and predictability
- Therefore to suspend the laws of nature too frequently would defeat the purpose of Design
Even though he was a sceptic Hume accepted the inevitability of evil.You have also departed a long way from standard design arguments. None of your points are needed by Aristotle, Thomas, or a modern take such as Al Moritz’ fine-tuning version.
They didn’t claim to be infallible and neither do I!
Not to mention the simplest of the lot: Paul’s For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made. – Rom 1
Irrelevant. Not **everything **reveals God’s
eternal power and divine nature.
In these arguments everything shows evidence of design, while you have to add a layer of complex decision criteria to determine what is designed and what is chance.
Your simplistic view of reality does not allow for the fact that
misfortunes are inevitable in an immensely complex physical system.
And your points don’t even scratch the surface. For instance in point 9 you need to say whether “too frequently” is every ten milliseconds or every ten centuries, and why.
It is absurd to demand knowledge that no human being can possess. Do you deny that miracles occur? Can you specify how frequently?
Point 3 is inherently relativist and needs to be replaced - we are better at predicting earthquakes now than one hundred years ago, so whether an earthquake is designed or chance is on shifting sand. And so on.
The ability to predict natural events is irrelevant. They are still coincidences which often lead to death and suffering - permitted but not directly caused or willed by God.
All this is unnecessary in the standard arguments and in Christianity.
Which arguments in particular?
In point 4 you admit that by your argument God is no longer omnipotent.
False!
You are arguing for a part-time god-ette, which subversively undermines the whole intent of the argument from design.
False deduction! God remains omnipotent because He has the power to withdraw free will or suspend the laws of nature
whenever and wherever He chooses…