Science seems crazy
Posted: Tue Apr 18, 2006 12:23 am
Feynman is a good egg.
Andrew L. wrote:Feynman is a good egg.
steve wrote:Matthew has mistaken structure for plan. If I scatter dried beans on the floor, and then notice that ten of them have collected within an inch of each other, and the little grouping looks just like Snoopy in profile, it would be a mistake to assume that they were put there intentionally, even though the odds against them landing in this precise arrangement are nearly infinite.
Things happen to be this way, that's all. Nothing more. Nobody put the dried beans there by choice, they just ended up there. It doesn't matter that I discern a pattern after the fact.
matthew wrote:But you have to admit, Steve, that this sort of thing that you describe would have to happen trillions upon trillions upon trillions of times...the mind reels at the number..........and happen juuuuuust RIGHT, mind you.......for there to be a cosmos (as I defined it) as there is today. You model falls short...way short.
steve wrote:matthew wrote:But you have to admit, Steve, that this sort of thing that you describe would have to happen trillions upon trillions upon trillions of times...the mind reels at the number..........and happen juuuuuust RIGHT, mind you.......for there to be a cosmos (as I defined it) as there is today. You model falls short...way short.
If some chance event in the past came out differently, the universe wouldn't cease to be, it would just be different than it is now. To look around you and say, "it couldn't have ended up like this by chance," is to mistakenly assume that nothing about the universe could have ever been any different than how we know it. Miami on Tuesday couldn't be any warmer than it was, not by one degree. That acorn couldn't have fallen one centimeter to the left... That is the scale of difference we're talking about being "chance," and I think it is perfectly reasonable, given that we observe it all around us.
Of course things could be different, but this is how they are. It is a mistake to assume that someone decided that it should be precisely like this.
steve wrote:matthew wrote:But you have to admit, Steve, that this sort of thing that you describe would have to happen trillions upon trillions upon trillions of times...the mind reels at the number..........and happen juuuuuust RIGHT, mind you.......for there to be a cosmos (as I defined it) as there is today. You model falls short...way short.
If some chance event in the past came out differently, the universe wouldn't cease to be, it would just be different than it is now.
To look around you and say, "it couldn't have ended up like this by chance," is to mistakenly assume that nothing about the universe could have ever been any different than how we know it.
Miami on Tuesday couldn't be any warmer than it was, not by one degree. That acorn couldn't have fallen one centimeter to the left... That is the scale of difference we're talking about being "chance," and I think it is perfectly reasonable, given that we observe it all around us[Matt's emphasis].
Of course things could be different, but this is how they are. It is a mistake to assume that someone decided that it should be precisely like this.
steve wrote:That something is unknown does not make it supernatural. Give me one reason to believe that there is anything other than the natural world. One reason. Seriouslly, if the unknown and the supernatural are immense and timeless, there must be some thing you can point to that would suggest it exists.
Isn't there anything? Nothing at all? I just have to believe in it so I can believe in it?
No can do. You've got to give me a reason.
jlamour wrote:They can't.
The idea of a supernatural universe, utopia, god, heaven is simply something that Plato brought to a conceptual level thousands of years ago and has been rehashed via ANY religion
matthew wrote:jlamour wrote:They can't.
The idea of a supernatural universe, utopia, god, heaven is simply something that Plato brought to a conceptual level thousands of years ago and has been rehashed via ANY religion
This is cheap Nietzsche.