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tirtlegrrl wrote:I hear this argument A LOT (and happened upon it again reading the thread inspired by the latest podcast): That such and such was "too unlikely" to have happened by "chance", therefore God did it.
Here's the question: At what level of probability does something cease to be "chance" and become "God did it"? 1/1,000,000,000? 1 followed by 20 zeroes? Thirty zeroes? How about the guy who tells God, "If this coin comes up heads three times, I"ll take that to mean you want me to do ____." Should he increase the number of coin flips just to make sure it's God?

tirtlegrrl wrote:
Here's the question: At what level of probability does something cease to be "chance" and become "God did it"? 1/1,000,000,000? 1 followed by 20 zeroes? Thirty zeroes? How about the guy who tells God, "If this coin comes up heads three times, I"ll take that to mean you want me to do ____." Should he increase the number of coin flips just to make sure it's God?

mitchellmckain wrote:Thermodynamics is based on such probabilistic reasoning, and the numbers are on the order of 1 in 10^23 so that is 23 zeros.

humanguy wrote: Here's another question: what is the level of probability that god is, or is not, a human invention?

tirtlegrrl wrote:humanguy wrote: Here's another question: what is the level of probability that god is, or is not, a human invention?
I have no idea how one would go about calculating such a probability. Inasmuch there are many conflicting ideas about God out there, some of those deities are likely made up and some of them may approximate the real thing (if it exists).

tirtlegrrl wrote:A (semi-related) question: How inaccurate can one's concept of God be and still have the real deity accept one's worship? Will all "true believers" necessarily march in theological lock-step with one another?

humanguy wrote: Are you saying, then, that you're willing to entertain the possibility that there is a "real thing?"

tirtlegrrl wrote:I hear this argument A LOT (and happened upon it again reading the thread inspired by the latest podcast): That such and such was "too unlikely" to have happened by "chance", therefore God did it.
Here's the question: At what level of probability does something cease to be "chance" and become "God did it"? 1/1,000,000,000? 1 followed by 20 zeroes? Thirty zeroes? How about the guy who tells God, "If this coin comes up heads three times, I"ll take that to mean you want me to do ____." Should he increase the number of coin flips just to make sure it's God?


tirtlegrrl wrote:I hear this argument A LOT (and happened upon it again reading the thread inspired by the latest podcast): That such and such was "too unlikely" to have happened by "chance", therefore God did it.
Here's the question: At what level of probability does something cease to be "chance" and become "God did it"? 1/1,000,000,000? 1 followed by 20 zeroes? Thirty zeroes? How about the guy who tells God, "If this coin comes up heads three times, I"ll take that to mean you want me to do ____." Should he increase the number of coin flips just to make sure it's God?

matt wrote: The "chance" argument is an intrasystematic critique of naturalism that doesn't have to assume theism. When someone says that the universe is too ordered to have happened by chance, they are saying that the naturalistic creation myth is too unlikely to be true--there has to be some other explanation for the formation of the cosmos. It doesn't follow that the Christian explanation is true, just that the naturalistic one is unlikely.

Douglas Adams wrote:Imagine a puddle waking up one morning and thinking, 'This is an interesting world I find myself in, an interesting hole I find myself in, fits me rather neatly, doesn't it? In fact it fits me staggeringly well, must have been made to have me in it!' This is such a powerful idea that as the sun rises in the sky and the air heats up and as, gradually, the puddle gets smaller and smaller, it's still frantically hanging on to the notion that everything's going to be alright, because this world was meant to have him in it, was built to have him in it; so the moment he disappears catches him rather by surprise. I think this may be something we need to be on the watch out for.'

tirtlegrrl wrote:I once suggested to a couple of believers that maybe cockroaches are the intended beneficiaries of the universe's fine tuning, and humans are just incidental bipeds with overactive imaginations...it didn't go over that well.


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