Rather, consider that the narrative is mistaken right from the start. Perhaps** no being went to any trouble at all in creating physical law.
Says you. You are only substituting your
perhaps for mine. Why is your perhaps better than mine?
Well, parsimony, for one thing. God just isn’t needed in the more economical rendering, right? That stilll demands a perhaps – parsimony is not a normative principle – but it is more efficient in terms of tis use of explanatory resources, wouldn’t you say?
, a robot?
We don’t have any basis for saying “might well have” beyond a logicla possibility. It
is a logical possibility – we don’t have any principled basis for ruling it out. But that’s as far as it goes, as a matter of
likelihood, it’s just inscrutable (if you doubt this, try to supply me some probabilities and the difficulty of numerators and denominators will be apparent, there). We can say the same thing for an “uncaused universe” – the probabilities
as probabilities (discrete selections from a quantifiable phase space) are inscrutable, too.
No God is needed to rectify the drama you set out there, because there was no such drama in the first place.
Oh my, not even a
perhaps?
Sorry, maybe it helps by inserting a hint: No God is needed [in the scenario I’m suggesting, where no God was around to create anything] to rectify the drama you set out there, because there was no such drama in the first place.
Does that help? In other words, under the “impersonal hypothesis”, there’s no need for a God in the picture, and thus the tension you were addressing doesn’t even arise…
I know there are many who are scientists who also get involved in theology –
Yes, here is one:
“Now we see how astronomical evidence leads to the biblical view of the origin of the world. The details differ, but the essential elements in the astronomical and biblical accounts of Genesis are the same: the chain of events leading to man commenced suddenly and sharply at a definite moment of time, in a flash of light and energy…. For the scientist who has lived by the faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the mountains of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries.” Robert Jastrow, *God and the Astronomers *
Jastrow is obviously wearing his “theologian” hat in writing this. The limits of science are neither foreign or mysterious to the scientist. It is a
given that at some point, the enterprise of natural explanatons for natural phenomena will exhaust itself, and give way to metaphysics.
I agree that once we turn to metaphysics, at least beyond what is necessary (“reality is real”), the scientist is thrown in with the theologian, the astrologer, the homeopath and the child telling fantastic stories. And I’m sure the scientist, like so many of us, would like to have some answers at the metaphysical level (beyond what is necesary to accept on faith – reality is real). But none avail, and I can see that that would be frustrating for one who has been working on building real knowledge, previously, That’s the nature of our reality, alas. Apparently, some like Jastrow glory in the futility of it, and the license they see they might take from it – the pleasures of a domain where you cannot be wrong, cannot have your ideas falsified! But for the working scientist, who surely has the capacity and interest in metaphysical question like anyone else, you might as well ask the astrologer there on the mountain top or the used car salesman as the theologian – they’re all standing on the same foundation.
Science is in some ways a war against intuition, the practice of seeing the world without the distortive lens of intuition, and that is one reason I think you sense that scientists generally resist theology more than you’d like.
And, as you imply, in some ways intuition is basic to science … especially in many cases of monumental breakthroughs. Democritus’ intuition of the atom a case in point. One can intuit God or Reason, As Einstein did, even with what you would call “the distorted lens of intuition.”
I think you misunderstand. Inuition and imagination are the
engine of science, and its progress toward knowledge. But they are not sufficient. Knowledge demands testing, verification, performance, and liability to falsification – features theology conspicuously lacks. Einstein’s intuitions, so spectacularly validated in some cases, were proven wrong in others. Intuition and imagination are the
(name removed by moderator)uts for science, the spur for new and novel hypotheses. But science demands performance and validation, and this is what separates it from theology, where intuition is the beginning and the end.
It’s difficult to embrace theology as a scientist, as one repudiates the credentials of the other, in terms of epistemology.
Difficult, but certainly not impossible, as many scientists have found.
That’s quite true. As I said, I was asked to read some Polkinghorne recently, and so I have. That’s a clear case of a man who is a serious scientist who also devotes many cycles to theology.
“Those who say that the study of science makes a man an atheist must be rather silly.” Max Born, Quantum physicist
I agree. Science can’t ever disprove God. If one supposes that science “makes” one an atheist, something has gone quite wrong in terms of reasoning.
-TS