Well, abucs, I have to say that I am impressed with your post. Based on other posts of yours, I was expecting something very different from you. I’m pleasantly surprised.
A few comments:
To my way of thinking, we don’t start out with a particular “view.” We look at the evidence and we see what is justified by that evidence.
The evidence we have tells us that matter/energy exists and that it behaves in certain regular ways. If you want to make some claim on top of that (that, for example, it was set up by an intelligent being), you need to supply evidence for that extra claim.
I don’t see any sufficient evidence for that claim in your post. The closest you get is this:
I’m having a hard time figuring out the gist of your argument here. Are you saying that cause and effect can only be possible if there is a god? I don’t think that you could ever demonstrate that to be true.
You also say this:, which is rather vague and doesn’t really tell us anything. What is it that “happens at the smallest level” that necessarily indicates that the “second view” is correct?
I would say it depends on where you start from. The people who first “discovered” the laws of physics had one starting point, you have another and i have yet another. When you say “WE know … and I am making claims on top of that”, you may be right from your point of view. But do “WE” really have the same starting point where we can agree on what is the basics we know? And what personal history and intellectual history is it that “WE” are coming from to agree on that?
I would say our concepts of what matter and energy actually are would be quite different. Is your starting point view the default? Why? Who says? Who and what has influenced that view?
To my way of thinking, it is not the default view of science. Science studies the relationships between things of the physical Universe. It hasn’t as yet actually said anything about what they are or where they ultimately came/come from.
For example, some people think everything in the Universe is made up of small pockets of matter, others concentrated balls of energy, still others again believe that the physical Universe is made up of vibrating strings that stretches over 14 dimensions of space (I believe this was or is Stephen Hawkins working model).
But we can keep on going further into this - what is energy? what are electrons? what is 14 dimensions? what are pockets of matter? etc. Each of us might have a working relationship in our heads on what is actually there, but science does not have a default. Science simply studies the relationship between that which we can see at only a macro level.
We cannot see ‘balls of energy’ but we know something is there because we study how it reacts with other “stuff”. So science doesn’t know much about what is there and even less about where it originally comes from and the mechanism for how it interacts. We can only study those things from a macro view. But there is no default scientific view which we can agree on in what that fundamentally is.
So i would not agree that we have a common starting point and that someone (me) is putting something “on top” of that. It depends on your own scientific background on how much you actually know to begin with and what is a coherent starting point that agrees with ALL the scientific testing of matter.
A common simple view is what is taught at school. In order to help students think about atoms we give the model of little bits/balls of matter (electrons) rotating around other bits/balls of matter (protons and neutrons) but this is simply a basic model to help students understand how atoms interact. We know that these “particles” have independent “weights”, we know some of them have “charge”, we know they are organised in different ways and can be suitably broken and re-assembled but the model that is given is only that - a model. “Weights” and “charge” when we really look at it are simply descriptions of how some matter reacts with other matter.
The simple model works for physics at the macro level, but we know that this view does not agree with what we see at the micro level. We go back to the question - what exactly is an electron made up of and what is the environment it is active in and why does it behave in that environment in certain ways?
From my study and reading I personally think that it has become evident that the “simple” models that are used for say high school and even into University physics may be a good model for “resultant” macro physics but are untenable when we roll our sleeves up and try to actually get at the question of - what is reality.
The two views i expressed earlier are both consistent with the scientific relationship of things we see in the physical Universe up to a point.
The first view i believe though is not tenable on a closer view of the science. You are of course correct, i have not outlined exactly why it is untenable. I don’t want to hijack the thread and perhaps we can talk offline. As i originally said, the public adversarial format of such forums does not support proper investigation and reasoned reflection.
Of course, i am not dependent on you ultimately seeing things from my view even when/if i do present such a case. I respect your continued view to give more weight to other sources of evidence. I am convinced though and that is what is naturally important (to me).
OK, i am going now and i’ll let you respond and send me a private mail if you want the case presented as to why i am convinced.