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12-30-2001, 07:58 PM | #11 |
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Ojuice5001,
Shoot an arrow at a plain white target. Now go up to the target and color a black dot around the tip of the arrow. Now put concentric circles around the dot. You've obviously hit the bullseye. That's fine tuning. |
12-31-2001, 01:46 PM | #12 | ||||
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However, I'm not sure that this actually matters. I think that placing any prior exphasis on sentient beings is unecessary for the argument. The best FT argument IMO is the probabilistic one: Which hypothesis is made most likely given the presence of FT? Thus given FT -that FT for the existence of rational beings is an extremely unlikely event given random chance and one universe- the intelligence hypothesis is strongly favoured to the extent of proof (as the chance hypothesis becomes so small as to be negligible in comparison to the intelligence hypothesis which remains reasonably probable). Quote:
Tercel [ December 31, 2001: Message edited by: Tercel ]</p> |
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12-31-2001, 03:22 PM | #13 | |||||
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In addition, even if X was important, why is this such a problem? Even if the Jackpot combo did have some signifigance (i.e., winning more money), we have no reason to assume that the God of Luck is on our side if we win. Again, if we lost, we'd not be saying our prayes of thanks to Lady Luck. Quote:
One more objection might be raised: if sentient life is so signifigant, and it's also rare, wouldn't this really argue against a fine-tuner tryign to make sentient life? Whouldn't he/she/it be better off making sentient life more abundant? To use the slot machine, wouldn't a player want to makr the spinners to the Jackpot is more likely? |
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12-31-2001, 04:30 PM | #14 | ||
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Tercel
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It is known that you cannot infer causality, much less intelligence, from a single instance, however improbable. Since the "Fine Tuner" is defined in terms of a single improbable event, you are merely relabelling the brute fact of this event without adding any explanatory power. [ December 31, 2001: Message edited by: SingleDad ]</p> |
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12-31-2001, 11:41 PM | #15 | ||||||
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Opps. LOL! Quote:
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Viewing your analogy differently, consider the situation of you walking into a room and seeing a stack of cards on the floor. They are in ascending numerical order from 1 to 15. Which is more likely: That they acheived that order by random shuffling or that someone deliberately put them in that order? Now add the condition that the door has a special lock which does not allow you to observe the cards unless they were in that order. Which is now more likely: That they acheived that order by random shuffling or that someone deliberately put them in that order? All very well, but you are here arguing that this is a false analogy because the FT is not really objectively special at all. And I still think you are missing the point: It doesn't need to be special - all it needs is to be in some way distinguishable. With our cards we had a distinguishable combination (in ascending order). We also had differing probabilities for the possible causes across the different combinations. Possible causes for the cards being in some order were Intelligent rigging of the deck and random shuffling. Intelligent rigging was quite significantly likely to put the cards in ascending order while it is moderately unlikely to have found any random looking orders interesting. Chance was extremly unlikely to put the cards in ascending order, white it was extremly likely to put them in some random looking order. If we drew a good old Venn Diagram we would see that given that the pack of cards was in ascending order, Intelligence rigging is the far more likely cause. Quote:
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Tercel |
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01-05-2002, 06:13 PM | #16 | |||||||||||
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The larger problem is, once again, you have presumed that "my" opening of the door is somehow signifigant. (And thus, the combination of numbers from one to fifteen.) The probelm is in your analogy of locked doors with cards on the other side to the development of sentient life in the Universe. We know what locked doors are meant to do, and thus it would seem unlikely that, if "I" could not open such a door unless the cards were in a certain order on the other side, that order is unlikely to occur unless "Someone" put the cards down that way. But we don't know what the function/purpose of the Universe is, much less that it's function is like a door with a card-sequenced lock, and to assume otherwise is to engage in circular reasoning. Quote:
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[ January 05, 2002: Message edited by: Rimstalker ]</p> |
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01-07-2002, 04:43 PM | #17 | |||
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I have used the word explanation here as meaning a complete and comprehensive explanation resulting in a full understanding of the causes and methods used - since it appears that this is what Drange meant by it. To quote him: Quote:
Now this is a fair enough (if a little stretched) meaning of the word explanation, so I let Drange's definition stand since we are discussing his article. I agree with Drange - given his understanding of "explanation" the theistic argument is woefully inadequate. I also think we may well never find an explanation of the beginning of the universe to the level that Drange requires. However, I do think there is a FT argument which suceeds and avoids Dranges objections. This argument does not propose to give any explanations in the sense used by Drange, but rather looks at the most likely cause or reason for FT. When I say "cause" here, I am using it rather loosely (perhaps "reason" would be a better word, but I've used "cause" up to here). eg I would, for example allow "chance" as a cause here. My favourite version of the FT argument, which I believe is successful, can be formulated (sorry, it's a little rough) thus: 1) FT exists. (ie there is an extremely small range of values that are required if the universe is to support life.) What is the most likely reason for this? 2a) FT could result from Necessity. ie it is logically impossible for the universe not to be the way it is. -It could never have been otherwise. 2b) A possible reason for FT could be that it's the result of the interference of an intelligence of some sort who desired FT. 2c) Or FT could simply have happened in our universe by some random probabilitistic "chance" process. 3) Either FT is a result of necessity or it is not. If not, then there was more than one possible combination of the universe's physical constants. Either the selection of a FTed universe from among these possibilities was the result of intelligence or it is not. We call the selection of one possibility among many by non-intelligence: Chance. Hence Necessity, Intelligence and Chance are the only possibilities. 4) Not Necessity. Some example reasons: 4a) Cosmologists frequently work with other hypothesised values for our finetuned physical constants. There seems to be no obvious logical contradiction involved in their work. 4b) To the absolute best of our knowledge, the initial state of matter and the formulations of the physical constants was entirely unpredictable. (Thus arguing against necessity since it entails only one possibility and thus predictability) 4c) Even if a GUT and GTE etc are one day discovered, (and if not then "Necessity" looks even more dodgy) it would still seem legitimate to ask "Why that particular formula?". After all, there are an infinite number of theories that could conceivably be actualised into a world. "Necessity" implies that our particular one must have been actualised which seems rather arbitrary and not necessary at all. 5) Thus we can rule out "Necessity" completely and consider it no more. Thus leaving Intelligence vs Chance as possible reasons. Now it is quite conceivable that if an Intelligence with the appropriate world-creating abilities did exist (which we don't know) then it would probably be quite moderately interested in creating a world with intelligent life (certainly compared to its likely interest in creating a world WITHOUT intelligent life). Chance on the other hand, given one world is hugely more likely to create a world without FT. (see 1) Now (using some basic statistics) what we are saying here is: Given one universe: P(I) = not negligible, perhaps moderately reasonable (the probability of such an intelligence existing) P(FT|I) = reasonable (the probability of an intelligence creating a world with FT) P(FT|C) = very very very very small so as to be all but negligible (the probability of chance selecting the FT values is super small) 6) Now, given one world and given fine tuning with I and C as the only possible causes, yields: P(I|FT) = All but 100% certain. (ie we are talking on the order of 99.999999999999999999999999999% certain or perhaps a bit more) P(C|FT) = Negligible 7) Conclusion: Given one universe, we can conclude with an astonishing degree of certainty that it was created by an intelligence. 8) But perhaps there is more than one universe? (and we are thus in a FTed universe by the anthropic principle) Well it would take about 10^200 universes to raise chance to a believable level of probability when compared to the intelligence hypothesis. But perhaps there are that many universes, or perhaps there are even an infinite number of universes? Call this the Many-Many-Worlds (MMW) hypothesis. (Which should be distinguished from the quantum physics many-worlds hypothesis which suggests there might be 10 or so other quantumly connected universes) So we have MMW vs Intelligence as possible reasons for FT. 9) Now I think there are several problems posed by MMW, which I can go into if anyone wants and which I think establish Intelligence as the more probable of the two. (I did have a draft of its problems on my hard-drive, but my computer's on the blink and I may have lost it) But for the meantime, I will content myself with saying that we have now established about a 50/50% chance of a creator-god existing which would seem to consitute "reasonable" belief for the theist. But far more amusing to my mind, is the position which the atheist is now put. The atheists so often criticise the theists for their belief in the invisible and undetectable God. But the atheist now finds themselves forced to defend the assertion that there exist thousands upon millions of these invisible, undetectable objects (The MMW hypothesis). And so in an amusing turn of events we theists find ourselves accusing the atheists of belief in tbe undetectable. The argument is worth its weight in gold for that alone: But as I say, there are a few problems with MMW which make the intelligence hypothesis preferrable. (But which I won't state in this post due to my computer problems and that this post is big enough already) But anyway, the above is the version of the FT argument which I favour, so I hope you can see where I am coming from here. Quote:
Because the combination in the analogy needs to be special to the intelligence. In the argument the Intelligence finds a Finetuned universe to be disproportunately worth creating - it finds such a universe particularly special. Humans find numbers in ascending order special (I used the word "distingushible" before. I meant distinguishible in some statistical sense, not merely that different combinations were trivially different). So such a comparison is required in my analogy if it is to be sound. Compare the analogy to the argument: A human would have found numbers in ascending order more interesting than a random combination. Therefore if a human had ordered the cards the ascending order possibility is quite likely. With chance, the ascending order possibility is extremely unlikely and some other order is far more likely. Thus, upon finding the cards in order you (rightly) would conclude that a human ordered them. An intelligent creator would have found other intelligent life (and thus a FTed universe) more interesting than a lifeless universe. Therefore if the intelligent creator had created the universe the FTing possibility is quite likely. With chance, the FTing possibility is extremely unlikely and some other order is far more likely. Thus, upon finding FTing you (rightly) would conclude that a intelligent creator put it that way. Here we see that the analogy fits my argument all but perfectly up to point 7. Anyway, I hope this clears up what I am arguing. -Since you seem to have got sidetracked on to some pretty harsh acusations of circular logic and assuming meaning which completely bemuse me because they seem to have no relevance whatsoever to what I am arguing. One further point: You misunderstood what I meant by the locked door. It wasn't that you knew the cards were in the room - you didn't. (thus ruling out any tests to see how often the door was locked etc) It simply prevented you seeing the cards - you wouldn't even know the cards existed unless they were in ascending order. It was, I think a very substandard part of my analogy. However the point I was making still stands: Whether or not you would observe something if it didn't happen has no effect on discussing the most probable reason for it happening. You should see this if you try and use the anthropic principle objection against my argument as I outlined it above: It is simply irrelevant. But I hope this clears things up a bit on what I am arguing and what I am not. Apologies for the length of the post, but complete clarification appeared to be necessary before we could get any futher. Tercel |
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01-07-2002, 09:27 PM | #18 |
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To all those that consider some form of "intelligent" creator as a more likely explanation for the "fine tuning" of the universe...
What is the intelligent creator of the intelligent creator? I would assume that the creator of the creator would have to be pretty damn "intelligent" itself, since something so obviously complex as an intelligent creator couldn't just exist on it's own Bah, of course you can go on forever with this, that's why I agree with SingleDad...might as well stop with the universe since you don't seem to see too many folks arguing over the existance of the universe |
01-08-2002, 12:32 AM | #19 | |
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Reason: constants can be 1-to-1 transformed into other constants, and there is no "natural" probability measure on a continous probability space. A measure which assigns probability 1-epsilon to the subset of life-friendly universes is not less natural than another one which assigns epsilon (epsilon, as usual, is very small). We should never forget that the famous "constants" are not constants of the universe, but of a particular approximate description/model of a region of the universe - which happens to be our current description/model. Regards, HRG. |
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01-08-2002, 02:30 PM | #20 | ||||||
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Tercel, I must admit that I'm at a loss here, as my knowledge of probability is limited. But I can tell you this: you typed a lot of stuff for nothing. Your whole post missed my point entirely. You started off as your first premise, "Fine tuning exists." I do not agree AT ALL to this, and all my previous arguments reflected this. Let's look just at your first premise:
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Your argument ONCE AGAIN rests on the unspoken assumption that our kind of life is special or signifigant. Since we have no idea what other kinds of life are possible in other kinds of Universes with different constants, this kind of blows your very first premise to hell. The fact that our kind of life is well-suited to the Universe it exists in is no more evidence for fine-tuning than saying that because a puddle three feet wide and one inch deep exists in a pothole three feet wide and one inch deep, the pothole was specially made. It would serve you well in the future to adress my actual arguments against your unstated assumptions about the signifigance of the life that exists in the Universe. I find it very difficult to continue debating with you civily when you continue to ignore and evade my counter-arguments. Notice: Quote:
You are, to put it shortly, admitting what I claimed: that you have to argue circularly to get anywhere with this. Quote:
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