*in the absence of fine-tuning, not even atomic matter or chemistry would exist, not to speak of planets where life might evolve!" *
What sort of life do you propose that would not be made up of atomic matter?
I am using the terms life as every scientist uses it, so no one can make the accusation that I am just changing the definition of life to suit my needs. If it changed from this commonly used and accepted definition, then it would not describe
life, it would describe something else. Asking if a kind of life could form that is not made of atomic matter, does not reproduce, take in energy, adapt to its environment etc. borders on being an incoherent statement (like asking if a married bachelor could exist). And if incoherent, then it can’t exist, and even God can’t do it (see below).
Omnipotence is not understood as raw power, but in terms of ability to actualize potential states of affairs. So God can’t create a stone so big that God cannot lift it because that does not describe a potential state of affairs. Similarly God can’t create a square circle, because that does not describe a potential state of affairs. It is simply nonsense, and as CS Lewis says, “nonsense remains nonsense even when we speak it of God. Nonsense does not acquire meaning because we put the words “God can” in front of it.” God remains omnipotent because he can do all things, but nonsense and contradictions are not things, but empty words.
This was a former skeptical attack on the fine-tuning argument called the Anthropic principle. It is no longer well regarded since Richard Swinburne (I think it was him) came up with this counterargument.
-you are making the claim, “we should not be surprised that the universe is finely tuned for life, since otherwise we would not be around to observe it.”
- this confuses the true claim: A: “if observers who have evolved within a universe observe its constants and qualities, it is highly probable that they will observe them to be fine tuned for their existence,” with the false claim A’: "It is highly probable that a universe exist which is finely tuned for the evolution of observers within it.
- Consider this illustration. I am dragged before a firing squad of 100 trained expert marksman. The command is given, “read, aim, fire.” They all fire, I hear the roar of guns, and they all miss. Should I conclude “well, I shouldn’t be surprised that they missed, because if they hadn’t, I wouldn’t be here to observe it?” Rather, given the enormous improbability of the marksman’s all missing, you should suspect that something more than just chance is at play.