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Old 07-08-2003, 11:14 PM   #11
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Default Re: Re: Re: The one question atheists tend to ignore

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I fail to see how randomness combined with more randomness averages out to less randomness, especially when at the macro scale an arbitrarily large amount of randomness is made up of any given event.
Well, all of statistical mechanics and thermodyanmics would fail if this were true. If the probability distributions of random variabless are known, then their expected values can be estimated. The larger the sample, the better the estimate.

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How do you know, your "faith" in naturalism? Which, btw, is based largely on the fictious cause and effect system.
Modern physics stresses 'relationships' between events rather than the classical cause and event concept. The latter can be ambiguous even without exercising QM. Relativity theory, for example, tells us that the order of events is dependent upon the selction of the reference frame.

Surprisingly, the relationship between coupled quantum events can be tighter than the classical mechanical causal model would allow.
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Old 07-09-2003, 12:48 AM   #12
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I do not know . . . when I tried to [CENSORED--Ed.] Margaret-Mary in the back during math class, she slapped me and her brothers used my head for soccer practice. . .

. . . I must confess . . . at the time . . . it seemed like a pretty clear "cause and effect."

Perhaps it was just coincidence?

Perhaps there was a "higher power?"

What but design of darkness to appall
If design govern in a thing so small.


--J.D.
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Old 07-09-2003, 05:21 AM   #13
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So here is the question atheists tend to ignore: What is the true, parsimonious reason for apparent order from underlying chaos?
I wasn't aware that atheists had an obligation to present an alternative to god's magic wand.
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Old 07-09-2003, 05:39 AM   #14
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There is no cause for an electron to take a certain path, it's random.
I'm guessing you don't have electricity in your home. When I push the lightswitch in my room, sometimes the computer turns on and sometimes a bolt of lightning hits me in the face.
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All effects are randomly triggered. ALL of them.
And sometimes the window opens and an alien spaceship appears filled with horny monkeys throwing canned meat at me. But I can't see them because I'm a Big Mac with a large Freedom Fries and a medium cup of Donkey Drool.

:notworthy
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Old 07-09-2003, 08:30 AM   #15
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"Donkey Drool"? What, they've changed the drinks menu at McD's again?

Normal, your 'question' is disingenuous; we do *not* ignore the fact that we do not understand every single bit of the universe we see.

It's not true that all scientists are atheists, though many are. Whatever an individual scientist may believe, they are all dedicated to the search for complete understanding; we atheists cheer that search on, and realize that clinging to any ancient dogma is antithetical to the spirit of that search.

You posted this in the EoG forum, and not in Science & Skepticism. I take this to mean that you think that this, the fact we do not have a precise understanding of all the mysteries of the physical universe, offers some sort of support for, or vindication of, the religion you hold to. Can you say just how the lack of a Theory of Everything gives your God some toehold in reality? I seriously doubt it.

Normal, I have no faith at all, in the sense you mean. My confidence in the theories of physics and the results of technology is a purely practical matter; if some other system of organizing and understanding the world we live in were to be discovered, and proven more effective than what we have now, I would embrace it, as would all scientists, eventually. That sort of intellectual flexibility is a hallmark of science, and of skepticism. In most religions the exact opposite is true.

In Buddhism, the root cause of all suffering is thought to be clinging to things in the material world; refusing to let go and realize that all things change. Science does not cling to its ideas and theories when something better comes along; that is what makes science superior to religion.
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Old 07-09-2003, 09:05 AM   #16
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Vorkosigan,

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Originally posted by Vorkosigan
I suppose, then, we could deploy your argument against all the theists who claim that since the universe is rational, god must exist.....
You could, although I'd expect similiar answers to the one's I'm getting here.

Bookwyrm,

Quote:
Originally posted by Bookwyrm
I don't know much about quantum physics, so I have no idea if this is the right answer, but I would imagine it would be similar to the way that when you roll one six sided die you can't predict whether you're going to get a six or a one, but when you roll an arbitrarily large number of dice you know that the mean will be 3.5.
That would be true if there was a deterministic solution to the quantum equations.

triplew00t,

Quote:
Originally posted by triplew00t
Therefore, it IS deterministic, but QM allows a wide range of randomness, but not complete chaos.
It is NOT deterministic, the range of randomness implies this. The existence of randomness at all implies this.

Physicist,

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Originally posted by Physicist
Well, all of statistical mechanics and thermodyanmics would fail if this were true.
The fact it doesn't fail is the interesting thing.

Quote:
Originally posted by Physicist
Surprisingly, the relationship between coupled quantum events can be tighter than the classical mechanical causal model would allow.
The classical model was completely deterministic, you can't get much tighter then that I'm afraid. If by tighter you meant "more accurate description of reality", then there's still the question of a practical-deterministic order with a non-deterministic base.

Theli,

Quote:
Originally posted by Theli
I wasn't aware that atheists had an obligation to present an alternative to god's magic wand.
They don't, which is part of the point.

Quote:
Originally posted by Theli
I'm guessing you don't have electricity in your home. When I push the lightswitch in my room, sometimes the computer turns on and sometimes a bolt of lightning hits me in the face.

And sometimes the window opens and an alien spaceship appears filled with horny monkeys throwing canned meat at me. But I can't see them because I'm a Big Mac with a large Freedom Fries and a medium cup of Donkey Drool.
The fact the universe seems ordered is exactly the point.

Jobar,

Quote:
Originally posted by Jobar
Normal, your 'question' is disingenuous; we do *not* ignore the fact that we do not understand every single bit of the universe we see.
Jobar, the intent of this thread was meant to be light hearted (notice the wink in the thread subject). I didn't want this to be in S&S because it is more an attack of the basis for rejecting god then anything. Just because a person can't account for all the aspects of their faith (or lack thereof), doesn't mean it's wrong and should be dismissed. All these false analogies with pink unicorns (for theists) and inflated human pride (for atheists) and such get a little tired after a while. My original question was an honest one, however.

Quote:
Originally posted by Jobar
Science does not cling to its ideas and theories when something better comes along; that is what makes science superior to religion.
I'd have to disagree. Science does tend to cling to theories, and there are numerous examples in history that point to this. For a long time many believed light was exclusively a wave even though it went against certain observable evidence. Einstien didn't believe the universe was expanding so he implemented a "cosmological constant" even though it violated his own theory (although later changed it and admitted the blunder when Hubble proved the universe must be expanding).

I think it's also important to note that individual faith often has nothing to do with religion at all.
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Old 07-09-2003, 09:37 AM   #17
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Default Re: Re: Re: The one question atheists tend to ignore

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Originally posted by Normal
If the microscopic domain is telling you things are uncaused, and everything at the macroscopic level is made of things from the microscopic level, how do you justify extrapolating a cause and effect system to explain evidence?
No, as has been pointed out before, causation takes on a different aspect, a stochastic (not quite random) character, on the quantum level. It is a revision of causative theory. How you came to the wild conclusion that this naturalistic theory is at all at odds with methodological naturalism is totally beyond me.

Quote:
The relationship is an illusion. The universe is what it is, but that doesn't answer the question of your explanation for why it is the way it is when the underlying components are purely chaotic.
Wrong, the relationships are real - merely not what we expected of them. If it was indeed purely chatotic, QM could provide no predictions. But it does. It, like evolutionary theory, shows that order can and does come from chaos.

Please don't apply scientific straw men to attack the philosophy underlying science.

Quote:
Of course I realize no one knows all the answers. But the thing to realize is that "lack of evidence for god" is based on an unparsimonious system as it is. You aren't being more parsimonious by taking out a system which is based on an already unparsimonious conclusion.
Your attemt to turn the parsimony objection against god on it's head has not been argued for. You've simply misconstrued physics and then boldly asserted a conclusion for which no argument is evident.
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Old 07-09-2003, 09:40 AM   #18
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Originally posted by Physicist
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Well, all of statistical mechanics and thermodyanmics would fail if this were true.
Normal Replied:
Quote:
The fact it doesn't fail is the interesting thing.
Normal, you clearly have not bothered to think your position through. Stochastic elements are an integral part of many theoretical models. Neural networks, biological and chemical evolution, thermodynamics all successfully incorporate randomness into thier decidedly nonrandom predictions.

Just what is your point? None of this is at all incompatible with scientific study or asserting that "god-theory" commits all of it's interesting issues to hand-waving appeals to the ineffable.

Normal wrote:
Quote:
Just because a person can't account for all the aspects of their faith (or lack thereof), doesn't mean it's wrong and should be dismissed. All these false analogies with pink unicorns (for theists) and inflated human pride (for atheists) and such get a little tired after a while.
The analogy of IPUs are very, very strong in relevant respects. There are only very silly reasons like projection to believe in IPU's andsuch. IPU's do not add coherently to our other world-theories. IPU's are highly complex which, when conjoined with the previous fact, make them highly unparsimonious like god.
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Old 07-09-2003, 10:56 AM   #19
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I find it wonderfully ironic that the OP criticizes those who conclude that God is fiction due to lack of evidence by asserting that something with endless evidence is fiction.

Now, which should I choose? Let's review:

1. God's evidence: well, there is none.

2. Cause and effect: I observe this on a daily basis. Nearly every minute of each day, I voluntarily undertake an action with the expection that it will result in an effect and, remarkably, it works. I turn the key on in my vehicle, the engine starts. I hit the little buttons on my keyboard, these letters appear. I read the Bible, my head hurts.

Hmmmmm. Although it is very close, I think I believe in cause and effect just a tad more. Call me crazy.
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Old 07-09-2003, 11:05 AM   #20
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Normal,

Quantum mechanical effects are not random. They are far from it. If they were random, chemistry wouldn't work. You'd pour two things together and always get something random. Spectroscopy and spectrometry would be imposible. Sorry for you, a misunderstanding of quantum doesn’t prove your god exists.

Suggested reading would include general chemistry books, quantum books, physical chemistry books (both thermodynamics, and kinetics/dynamics), and books on infrared and ultraviolet spectroscopy, and nuclear magnetic immaging. In addition, inorganic and organic chemistry texts can be untilised as well.
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