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Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 10:21 am)Jörmungandr Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 9:43 am)SteveII Wrote: 1. The arguments are not conclusive on their own. They are part of a cumulative argument for the existence of God. Separating them out and positing different entities is an unreasonable step (there is no reason). 

In a cumulative argument, one result is dependent upon the prior result, and so on.  These are all independent lines of evidence: none of them reinforce each other.  What you have is what is known as a 'rope argument' in which the independent strands are woven together to make one argument.  In a rope argument, the whole is only as strong as the strongest individual strand.  And in your case, none of the individual strands are particularly strong or convincing.  So what you actually have is a weak argument.

Perhaps I should have use the phrase "cumulative case".

Regarding the arguments as a group, they are inductive in nature and give a probabilistic conclusion.  I think very few people become a Christian because of the arguments--rather it is an assurance that a belief in God (at least a god) is not irrational and serves as a check against the barrage of atheists shallow challenges to faith being a reasonable thing to hold.
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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 12:32 pm)Neo-Scholastic Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 12:11 pm)Whateverist Wrote: What you call "fine tuning" is what I call things arraying themselves as they must given their inherent properties and current trajectory.  
And just how did they get just those highly exact inherent properties that so conveniently arrange themselves and why must the various trajectories be preserved according to very precise principles? Mere coincidence? They just do for no reason at all?


That's like asking how the lottery winner knew to choose just those numbers. We're living in the 'winning ticket' and are part and parcel of it.
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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 1:53 pm)Whateverist Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 12:32 pm)Neo-Scholastic Wrote: And just how did they get just those highly exact inherent properties that so conveniently arrange themselves and why must the various trajectories be preserved according to very precise principles? Mere coincidence? They just do for no reason at all?


That's like asking how the lottery winner knew to choose just those numbers.  We're living in the 'winning ticket' and are part and parcel of it.

The lottery is not a good analogy for the fine-tuning argument. A better analogy is if there were billions and billions of white ping pong balls and one black ball. If the black ball rolls down the shoot, you can live. A white one, you will be shot. Each individual white ball is equally improbable, but the odds of you getting some white one is overwhelming. Now, to get closer to the actual odds, you would need to see that black ball roll down the shoot 5 times in 5 drawings in a row to live. If you witnessed that happening, you would be certain that the game was rigged. So we are not interested in why you got the particular ball you did (ever ball was equally improbable), but why you got 5 life-permitting balls in a row. 

That, in a nutshell, is the fine-tuning argument. We are not interested in why this universe exists, but why a life-permitting one exists. As in the drawing above, we have very good reasons to think the universe was rigged for life.
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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 1:53 pm)Whateverist Wrote: That's like asking how the lottery winner knew to choose just those numbers.  We're living in the 'winning ticket' and are part and parcel of it.

Your scenario is similar to Borges's when he said that the in an infinite universe all possibilities would be exhausted. The key word here is possibilities. A lottery result will never be "FISH." Now it could be that unrestricted chance could produce an infinite number of cartoon worlds or world's made entirely from LEGO blocks. That stance is a very high price to pay. At any moment our world could become absurd too! Even if this particular world was created by chance, it would still be constrained by metaphysical laws that are the ultimate source of the fine-tuning needed allow one permutation with life in it.
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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
Strong fine-tuning is a thought experiment in a universe where it's not even known that the constants involved could have been different, that they aren't interrelated, etc. We're not in the position of being able to declare the odds are long...we don't even know if there is more than one 'lottery ticket', or if there are lots with the same numbers on them. We can only speculate.
I'm not anti-Christian. I'm anti-stupid.
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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
In the context of Theism Fine Tuning is pointless .
Seek strength, not to be greater than my brother, but to fight my greatest enemy -- myself.

Inuit Proverb

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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 2:40 pm)SteveII Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 1:53 pm)Whateverist Wrote: That's like asking how the lottery winner knew to choose just those numbers.  We're living in the 'winning ticket' and are part and parcel of it.


That, in a nutshell, is the fine-tuning argument. We are not interested in why this universe exists, but why a life-permitting one exists. As in the drawing above, we have very good reasons to think the universe was rigged for life.

Could you please elaborate on what those very good reasons are.   In addition, supposing that the universe was rigged for life, how can you be sure that the Christian deity, and not some other deity (or some other life-form for that matter), is actually responsible?











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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 4:27 pm)Kernel Sohcahtoa Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 2:40 pm)SteveII Wrote: That, in a nutshell, is the fine-tuning argument. We are not interested in why this universe exists, but why a life-permitting one exists. As in the drawing above, we have very good reasons to think the universe was rigged for life.

Could you please elaborate on what those very good reasons are.   In addition, supposing that the universe was rigged for life, how can you be sure that the Christian deity, and not some other deity (or some other life-form for that matter), is actually responsible?

First, none of these arguments will get you to the God of the Bible. They only get you to a God with a list of properties that the arguments themselves infer. To get to the God of the Bible , you need additional information. The arguments can be summed up in this quick video:





(March 27, 2017 at 4:05 pm)Mister Agenda Wrote: Strong fine-tuning is a thought experiment in a universe where it's not even known that the constants involved could have been different, that they aren't interrelated, etc. We're not in the position of being able to declare the odds are long...we don't even know if there is more than one 'lottery ticket', or if there are lots with the same numbers on them. We can only speculate.

Can you share a link by a physicist/cosmologist that  discusses the universe's initial constants could have been a large range of values and still been life-permitting? Everything I have ever read says the opposite: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine-tuned...e#Examples.
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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 2:40 pm)SteveII Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 1:53 pm)Whateverist Wrote: That's like asking how the lottery winner knew to choose just those numbers.  We're living in the 'winning ticket' and are part and parcel of it.

The lottery is not a good analogy for the fine-tuning argument. A better analogy is if there were billions and billions of white ping pong balls and one black ball. If the black ball rolls down the shoot, you can live. A white one, you will be shot. Each individual white ball is equally improbable, but the odds of you getting some white one is overwhelming. Now, to get closer to the actual odds, you would need to see that black ball roll down the shoot 5 times in 5 drawings in a row to live. If you witnessed that happening, you would be certain that the game was rigged. So we are not interested in why you got the particular ball you did (ever ball was equally improbable), but why you got 5 life-permitting balls in a row. 

That, in a nutshell, is the fine-tuning argument. We are not interested in why this universe exists, but why a life-permitting one exists. As in the drawing above, we have very good reasons to think the universe was rigged for life.

Bullshit! If you stupidly think the universe was put here with humans in mind, then go take a space shuttle up to space, take a space walk and take your helmet off.

13.8 billion year old universe, 150 billion observable galaxies and mostly empty space, and a 4 billion year old planet, of which, we have had had 5 mass extinction events, of which the life left over 1% of the 99% that have gone extinct. A 4 billion year old planet of which our species has only been on it in our current form 200 thousand years, and of those 200,000 years we have only had writing and cities for only about 10,000 years. Seems like a shitload of waste by your sky wizard if you want to claim he is perfect. 

We exist because stars died 10s of billions of years ago and the atoms in them lead to the formation of our solar system. We are not the product of a sky hero anymore than hurricanes are products of the Ocean God Poseidon.

(March 27, 2017 at 4:44 pm)SteveII Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 4:27 pm)Kernel Sohcahtoa Wrote: Could you please elaborate on what those very good reasons are.   In addition, supposing that the universe was rigged for life, how can you be sure that the Christian deity, and not some other deity (or some other life-form for that matter), is actually responsible?

First, none of these arguments will get you to the God of the Bible. They only get you to a God with a list of properties that the arguments themselves infer. To get to the God of the Bible , you need additional information. The arguments can be summed up in this quick video:





(March 27, 2017 at 4:05 pm)Mister Agenda Wrote: Strong fine-tuning is a thought experiment in a universe where it's not even known that the constants involved could have been different, that they aren't interrelated, etc. We're not in the position of being able to declare the odds are long...we don't even know if there is more than one 'lottery ticket', or if there are lots with the same numbers on them. We can only speculate.

Can you share a link by a physicist/cosmologist that  discusses the universe's initial constants could have been a large range of values and still been life-permitting? Everything I have ever read says the opposite: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine-tuned...e#Examples.

Knock it off dude. You are not going to pass junk science off as real science. You are not going to convince us, much less Stephen Hawking or Lawrence Krauss or Neil Degrasse Tyson that astrophysics proves your dead man on a stick magic baby God.
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RE: Theists: What is the most compelling argument you have heard for Atheism?
(March 27, 2017 at 2:40 pm)SteveII Wrote:
(March 27, 2017 at 1:53 pm)Whateverist Wrote: That's like asking how the lottery winner knew to choose just those numbers.  We're living in the 'winning ticket' and are part and parcel of it.

The lottery is not a good analogy for the fine-tuning argument. A better analogy is if there were billions and billions of white ping pong balls and one black ball. If the black ball rolls down the shoot, you can live. A white one, you will be shot. Each individual white ball is equally improbable, but the odds of you getting some white one is overwhelming. Now, to get closer to the actual odds, you would need to see that black ball roll down the shoot 5 times in 5 drawings in a row to live. If you witnessed that happening, you would be certain that the game was rigged. So we are not interested in why you got the particular ball you did (ever ball was equally improbable), but why you got 5 life-permitting balls in a row. 

That, in a nutshell, is the fine-tuning argument. We are not interested in why this universe exists, but why a life-permitting one exists. As in the drawing above, we have very good reasons to think the universe was rigged for life.

If the physical constants were different, life as we know it might not exist. It doesn't follow that life couldn't exist.

Even the assertion that "our universe is life-permitting" is quite misleading. The fact that we haven't observed any life outside of Earth, even with an abundance of Earth-like planets out there, is good evidence that our Universe is barely life-permitting at all (that is to say, almost not life-permitting). Life just managed to precariously evolve on one tiny planet in the Milky Way.
"Faith is the excuse people give when they have no evidence."
  - Matt Dillahunty.
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