I never claimed you believed in chaos, but if there is no creator then we would be more akin to accidents then anything else. Unless you ascribe to a more pantheistic approach, which i think neither of us do.
Calliope:
I still don’t understand the accident thing. The universe creates following it’s own order. There’s nothing accidental about it. I guess it boils down to what you consider and accident or even how you define random. To me those things tend to mean without order, which the Universe most definitely is not.
I do consider myself a pantheist in the sense that the Universe is the Ultimate Reality, but in no way does it have attributes of a being or godlike interest in us. It does it’s thing and we are one of the countless results of it doing it’s thing.
I suppose if your definition of god is creator, then the Universe could be plugged in as equivalent, but all the gods I’ve ever heard described seem to have a particular agenda that has humanity front and center. That doesn’t appear to be the case with the Universe.
But wouldn’t order have to come from something external, especially since the universe isn’t sentient(as far as we know)
Why would order need to be imposed from something external? What model do we have that suggests that? From what I know of reality (which as a mortal and finite being is pretty small) order seems to come from within, not without. My cells run my body, not me. Chemistry and physics call the shots and the characteristics of things come from within, not without.
And what difference does sentience make? Whatever “intelligence” that operates in the Universe certainly doesn’t bear any resemblance to human sentience. It’s constantly surprising us. I guess I posit that sentience like our own is clearly NOT necessary for the Universe to do it’s thing since it’s been doing its thing for a heck of a long time without us or anything like us calling the shots.
I find the watchmaker example beyond laughable. Yes, if I found a watch on the beach I’d guess that some human made it because it bears all the marks of something made by a human to solve a human problem.
Nothing in the Universe appears inconsistent with its surroundings such that it immediately begs that something outside and different from it manufactured it. It’s all so consistent and integrated.
I get the exact opposite reaction (apparently) than those who find the watchmaker to be a convincing argument. The more I learn about the universe or see something beautiful and astounding, the less any kind of personal God makes sense to me. Nothing is out of place or inconsistent. Nothing seemed fashioned with the sort of intention that theists tend to put on things.
Honestly, gods seem so small and petty and ridiculous compared to reality. I literally have the exact opposite response than most believers. I wonder why it is that we look at exactly the same things and reach opposite conclusions.