Rath said:
I don't see how you can relate a law of science, essentially a mathematical explanation of an observation, to God. Science observes, hypothesises and then tests against physical evidence. You simply cannot do the last step when hypothesising that God created the universe. As for the teleological fine-tuning argument, it largely falls apart due to the anthropic principle. The anthropic principle essentially states that if the universe was not perfect for life then we would not be able to observe it. Hence if there are a large number of universes (which currently seems very likely) then only universes with the perfect parameters would ever be observed. |
The only thing I am comparing is the non-physical nature of God and a law of science. This was the point of my last post and is the only relationship I am drawing. I am just comparing one characteristic of God with one characteristic of a scientific law. I am hardly trying to put the two on equal footing. I am quite certain the anthropic principle just says the universe is suitable for life, not perfect. Personally, I never found the anthropic principle very satisfactory as a form of explanation. Its essentially just saying, "we are alive, therefore we live in a place that is suitable for us living here". I would not even qualify this as an explanation at all. The only way the anthropic principle even functions as an explanation is in conjunction with the multiverse theory. The multiverse theory also has its problems though. The primary one is we cannot view another universe. This is where the question about the simplicity of God's mind enters the deabte. Because we cannot have any direct observational evidence of God or the multiverse, we have to find out which one is simpler.
Why do you say it seems likely that there are a large number of universes?







