Hi Amergin —One famous argument is 'intelligent design' ... it's not something I hold with as it's currently expressed, but it does raise questions.
Evolution by intelligent design is countered by observation. I. D. does not support or disprove God. Evolution produces many forms that later fail when conditions change if they cannot adapt. 90+percent of all kinds of life forms have gone extinct. Humans, for example, have a biophysiology that is full of seeming errors. We have a spinal column best adapted for horizontal position of a quadruped. Evolution allowed us to walk upright as an advantage in Ape/human evolution.
However, humans still have that quadruped spine with all of the weight above any level bearing down and squeezing on the soft disks. The result is millions of Americans with chronic back pain, many of whom are on disability. With real I.D., the bio-engineer would have made a spine with a more flexible notochord strong enough to support weight but no disks to herniate and paralyse millions of people. There are many structural flaws in all animals. That is because evolution was not intelligently planned. It just allows mutants need to be only fit enough to survive changed conditions. It does not demand the mutations to be perfect and they never are.
The short answer is nothing occurs in nature that the Laws of Nature do not allow for, but that is far from saying the laws of nature 'consciously' or 'intelligently' or 'rationally' direct evolution towards that end.
Correct. Animals and Plants happen to have developed DNA that has loose internucleotides that allow frequent rearrangements. These happen all of the time. Most do not thrive. When ecosystems or environments change unfavourably to a species, some mutants who may better live in the changed environment will prosper over the original species. It is clearly not planned. DNA mutates and causes changes in phenotypes, with different properties. Some will be better adapted for survival and most will not. Adaptations may be greater strength, better cold tolerance, greater heat tolerance, better defensive armour protection, better predatory teeth and claws, venom, or greater brain complexity with advances in intelligence.
I have a hypothesis that planets fit for biological life will eventually have predators, herbivores with speed or defensive armour, warm fur or sweat glands, or greater intelligence. In addition, it is all random chance survivors being the lucky 1% of mutants that succeed.
The counter-argument that it's not intelligent design, but simply the result of an infinite number of universes in which one will, eventually, produce life, consciousness, being, etc., seems something of a non-explanation, a rather weak argument.
Multiple universes are purely speculative. A different universe may have different laws of physics and chemistry. All we know is our present universe and a good bit about its laws. In our universe, an earth like planet in orbit around a Sun-like Star, in the habitable (Goldilocks) zone with Water, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Hydrogen is likely to produce a variety of life forms from the super large, the predatory fierce, the herbivorous speedsters, and the intelligent animals with manipulative extremities.
Simply then, as man is aware of material laws, he has every good reason to assume laws governing consciousness, being, evolution ... and those laws were part and parcel of the Big Bang, they were hard-wired into it, as it were ... which leads us back to the question of what caused the Big Bang ... why is there anything at all?
Neither you nor I know that answer. Nobody knows that answer. Our difference is that for me, not knowing an answer does not compel me to use my imagination and invent some cosmic intelligent being. My rational scepticism makes me highly doubt a God with human behaviour patterns, vengeance, hatred, vindictiveness, and interfering in our individual lives. Some other undefined gods, conscious or non-conscious are equal propositions.
I think the first set (termites, etc.) shows signs of organisation for survival, the second (rain, etc.) does not.
Rain does follow many variable rules in when it forms, falls, or fails to fall. It is best considered in Chaos Theory, which is why weathermen so often are wrong. Rain does follow natural laws of physics just like the termites and the last surviving human species, us. Termite organisation follows a long progression from more solitary insects to some who lived together in groups. Those groups who developed cooperative survival behaviours proved better than solitary ones. Humans evolved societies in much the same way. Homo sapiens sapiens the only survivor of 8 different human species, may have left the others behind because of social organisation, altruism, and organised group fighting... more than simple intelligence. Termites are the social successes of the arthropod clan and humans the social successes of the vertebrates.
And would not they be right? The logic follows the line that God encompasses all possibility, not a God who is less than His creation.
What do you mean by less than his creation? Whether God is conscious or an unconscious set of natural forces, it or He is clearly different from us (it/his creation.) A powerful inanimate force of nature is clearly superior to its creation, mere talking apes. Different does not mean lesser. Creation of a Universe is clearly greater than anything made by man, regardless of that creator being conscious, intelligent, or inanimate force. Humankind will never make a universe using human intelligence.
Not super-human, but rather something that transcends the human condition, and indeed every other condition.
Something transcending the human being does not mean that this transcendence consists of animal intelligence, human inventiveness. or playing rugby. Intelligence is simply a behavioural adaptation produced by animal evolution as a survival tool. We are more intelligent than our former predators (lions). Lions are more intelligent than Wildebeests. Bald Eagles are more intelligent than salmon. All are animals. Intelligence does not apply to plants. There is no logical syllogism implying that transcendence includes animal intelligence. The only intelligence that we know of is in animals.
Again, logic would say so. Man is not omnipresent, not omnipotent, not omniscient — being finite and contingent. The argument is that God is neither finite nor contingent, therefore not limited as man is.
We agree that man is not omni anything. Man is finite and contingent. However, we have no information about a hypothetical cosmic intelligent being. A universal force postulated by scientists may well be infinite and contingent. Such a universal unifying force need not have intelligence of any kind, and animal intelligence is the only kind we
know that exists.
Same logic again ... God is not a body as we and everything else is.
God, in the Christian or Judeo-Islamic form, is purely speculative. I agree God is not like us. We invented God as a hypothetical explanation for all mysteries. Unfortunately, primitive man gave this entity a human personality with all of the faults of a Bronze Age Warlord, including male gender, anger, love, hate, vindictiveness, and capriciousness. I do not accuse God of being such.
And still does ... rational man has lost his poetic and symbolic sensitivity to interpret signs.
I am not sure what you mean by interpreting signs. Rational mankind is capable of interpreting poetry, art, music, literature, and mythological fiction. It is the rationalist who distinguishes mythology from reality, and fiction from documented history.
I agree that God is speculative, but where do you begin 'science'? Philosophy is the first science, from which all subsequent disciplines flow ... and there are plenty of philosophical arguments for the existence of a deity.
Philosophy is pure speculation. Science does begin with some speculation. However, in science, speculation is followed by hypothesis to be tested. With evidence the hypothesis may be expanded to a theory. The Theory must be examined critically by very critical scientific peers. (And believe me, they are critical. I know.) Both the researcher and the peer critics try to disprove the theory or find flaws in the explanation. Only then can an idea be a genuine scientific theory. A Theory is the best explanation by reason and evidence, for observed phenomena. Evolution is not a Theory. It is an observed phenomenon. The Theory of Evolution is Natural Selection. Continental drift is observed movement of Continents on crustal plates. Plate Tectonics is the Theory of Crustal Plate movement propelled by magna currents balanced by plate spreading and plate subduction. The Fact is Tectonic Plate movement carrying continents and causing earthquakes and volcanoes at plate boundaries and magma hot spots. We know these, Evolution and Continental Drift to be facts. This is not philosophy.
'Scientism' and 'empiricism' is a kind of fundamentalism divorced from its philosophical roots — it's a closure of the mind. If sciece had depended upon empirical data only, from the very beginning, we'd not have advanced one jot.
I totally disagree. Philosophy does not provide knowledge but unlimited speculation. Science is not fundamentalism because there are no sacred cows. Theories are always subject to re-examination or reformulation... not by philosophy or mythology, but by scientists skilled in logic, analytic thinking, associative comparison, and strong scepticism. We have advance in 100,000 years not by religion, philosophy, or meditation, but by scientific method. The first makers of stone tools were using a simple form of scientific thinking. It has led to understanding of Astronomy, Astrophysics and Solar Evolution, Planet Formation, Plate Tectonics, Galaxies and Black Holes, Chemistry, Physics, Biological Evolution, Neuroscience, Particle Physics with subatomic structure, and Quantum Mechanics. I am sorry, but philosophy and its cousin, Religion, have produced no definitive advance in mankind.
Nor do we theologians, that's a very materialist view of God. The God you suppose is 'man+', which is not what theology supposes at all.
It may not be your theology or my belief. However, it is the core belief in Christianity (Catholicism), Islam, and Judaism. However, the evolution of Jesus from a mere human into a subordinate god, and into a full god is well documented by writings of the arguing Christians themselves in the 2nd to 4th centuries. I suggest you read the book
When Jesus became God, "The Struggle to define Christianity during the last days of Rome," by Richard E. Rubenstein. It is packed with well documented writing by the competing Christian Cults noted leaders.
Then they have a defective idea of 'God'.
Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, and Zoroastrianism all have very defective ideas about a God.
To step from deism, or even theism, to the belief in a God who can be known, or a God who makes Himself known, is a huge step, and takes faith, not empirical data.
How can one believe in a God who can be known when He does NOT make himself known, except in the unsubstantiated claims of revelation by a small number of rather eccentric people? If a God wished to be known, he would REALLY make himself known to ALL people simultaneously. The sky looks blue to all people who have intact vision. Therefore, we do not need to believe that the sky looks blue, it is a fact. Belief in a God who hides from our inquiry is not the fault of the observer but the lack of any reason to accept the God hypothesis.
I would suggest you focus more on the God of the philosophers in the first instance, before looking at the God of the theologians.
I dismissed the God of the Theologians when I was old enough to speak Gaelic and then English in the First Grade. The Bible made me an Agnostic.
May the Force be With You,
Amergin