I disagree with those atheists. As I was once one I must say that the morality argument was far more convincing and played a huge part in my conversion
@DominikĎurkovský2 ай бұрын
IMO the Transcendental Argument might be the best one as most of the objections I've seen to it have Been pretty bad
@GallandOlivier2 ай бұрын
@@DominikĎurkovský If it is the one that refers to the existence of logic I agree it Can be very persuasive but I still think the morality argument is more instinctive because every one encounters moral dilemma on a daily basis. Especially when submitted to foreign wars, genocide or murder, morality is everywhere whereas the use or logic and reason is much more intellectual and in general people are not used to even question the existence of logic as it is their axiom/faith.
@conspiracy19142 ай бұрын
its a different argument for everyone as I see it.
@GallandOlivier2 ай бұрын
@@conspiracy1914 Fair enough !
@jhoughjr12 ай бұрын
As a formet atheist also, i dont think fine tuning is that solid. We cant really say what is moat likely or not as far as an indicator of design. Often it feels we are surprised by something but what alternative would we expect? God is a choice not a measurement. It was actually abstract ideas that leqd me to faith.
@Voxis_234562 ай бұрын
As a non-believer, I think the argument from the existence of consciousness is probably the strongest. Consciousness is extremely hard to explain from a scientific pov.
@aidanya13362 ай бұрын
For me this puts them in the same bucket. They claim something science can't explain, therefor god.
@Voxis_234562 ай бұрын
@aidanya1336 Agreed, I can at least see science eventually being able to explain consciousness, I don't see it ever explaining the fine-tuning or how the universe came into being. This is because we can't know what happened before the universe began because science didn't exist before the universe did.
@aidanya13362 ай бұрын
@Voxis_23456 maybe, but there is a chance we find that all these different parameters are all derived from each other. Which can bring it down to only 1. We might not be able to find out why that one is the way it is. But fine tuning is pretty dead by than.
@DeepKnight-nr6vo2 ай бұрын
its not that hard. cognitively neurons travel inside different part of brain function but, belivers is more like cowards amydala which only posess emotion with lack of logic.
@YouTubedoesntneedhandlesАй бұрын
@@DeepKnight-nr6voAmygdala*
@toeknee55652 ай бұрын
Pray for eachother, believers and skeptics. We are all His.
@fij7152 ай бұрын
Doubt is the work of Satan.
@jackieo86932 ай бұрын
Or pre His
@Hospitaller10992 ай бұрын
Amen!
@zimpoooooo2 ай бұрын
I'm not.
@toeknee55652 ай бұрын
@@zimpoooooo praying for you.
@misterkittyandfriends14412 ай бұрын
I think its pretty wild that the new counter to fine tuning involves apparently biting the bullet on physical dualism. Bye, materialism.
@macroglossumstellatarum30682 ай бұрын
Which leaves then vulnerable to an argument from the basis of morality
@DigitalGnosis2 ай бұрын
Who is saying this?
@moleratcon2 ай бұрын
Yeah, also the idea of a necessary entity that created and fine-tuned the universe. Materialism is officially dead at this point.
@misterkittyandfriends14412 ай бұрын
@@DigitalGnosis "Psychophysical" laws are universal laws referring to the set of laws that govern two discrete types of phenomena: material things and minds. So, the gentleman proposing the "electrons in love" thought experiment is relying on materialism being false.
@user-gs4oi1fm4l2 ай бұрын
@@misterkittyandfriends1441 under the empirical materialism most atheism prides itself upon yes, it has to presume an unobserved set of conditions that are contrary to what we have actually observed from physics.
@bman52572 ай бұрын
The reason they think that’s the strongest is because the New Atheists were ignoramouses that didn’t understand Classical Theism. They don’t understand the basic definition of God and still imagine him as a contingent god like Zeus or Poseidon. You need to understand classical theism or God as pure act for St. Thomas’ or Aristotle’s arguments to make sense.
@juliuslinus2 ай бұрын
Charity is a virtue ;) These are bright people, if they don't understand classical theism (which most people don't) it's probably because they haven't been introduced to it properly. For that, I place the blame on the shoulders of academia, which has systematically excluded such thought in favor of STEM, which provides more grant funding to university.
@anthonyzav37692 ай бұрын
Problem is in the OT testament he acts EXACTLY like Zeus. Read the Book of Samuel - Israelite generals are literally having conversations with him about military strategy via magical devices like the Urim Thummin.
@Onlyafool1722 ай бұрын
@@anthonyzav3769okay you misunderstood what the original argument said, they dont realize that we believe that God is identical to existence (not bound by time), not a singurality that is born out of caos, like zeus, how God acts is irrelevant to the point presented, the distinction of both is not because of morality, bur simply that one exists in time while the other is what time naturally flows from, which is the basis for classical theism
@redbepis46002 ай бұрын
Almost like that's how he was originally written and new views are mere retcons. Christianity didn't pop out of nowhere. We remember your history
@josephvictory95362 ай бұрын
@@juliuslinus Charity is a good approach for most, but the new Atheist's actively lie in bad faith. For example when Dawkins and ilk questioned the existence of the person Jesus. For them it was all political. People who followed Hitler were ignoramuses but you arent likely to go to hell just for supporting a candidate. Otherwise everyone democrat in the USA would go to hell because democrat position on abortion. Being atheist on the other hand is a one way ticket.
@ethancoppel2 ай бұрын
There is something comedic to me that I don't find the fine-tuning argument rather strong, despite being Christian, while atheists claim it as the best argument.
@calmite2 ай бұрын
Possibly due from an information issue
@jd3jefferson5562 ай бұрын
It's what convinced me to look deeper in the existence of God when I was an atheist
@hydraph48432 ай бұрын
Yeah, not all atheists will agree it is. It seems like a lot of channels do, but I'm an agnostic atheist, but I actually think it's not one of the better arguments. I think things like personal experiences are probably better
@patrickthomas21192 ай бұрын
@@hydraph4843 personal experiences is just anecdotal evidence which by any objective measurement is among the weakest forms of evidence. Sure they can provide an emotional response but if you are person that is not easily swayed by emotional appeals then an argument from personal experience is going to be remarkably uncompelling.
@youngKOkid12 ай бұрын
The argument from motion and argument from contingency are the strongest arguments.
@mrsnakesmrnot849917 күн бұрын
Why did the host change the subject when he was asked to pray to his god to learn what was written in the envelope? It is because the host knows that his prayer will not be answered. Praying must be a waste of time.
@bradydeboer46942 ай бұрын
Alex O'Connor doesn't belong in the thumbnail; he has said, on multiple occasions, that he doesn't find the fine-tuning argument very compelling-he finds the contingency argument better
@ldd40432 ай бұрын
Also recently he had stated consciousness, and the scientific lack of understanding of consciousness, is a better argument for God.
@ryanevans26552 ай бұрын
This makes sense, because he has more of a philosophy/theology background, not a physics/science background.
@TheAnimeAtheist2 ай бұрын
@@ryanevans2655 Even then physics and science can't yet explain what causes conciousness and awareness beyond just the ability to respond to stimuli. This isn't to say there isn't a naturalistic explanation, but we don't even have an idea as is. All we know right now is that it's somehow associated with the brain and brain states, that's it.
@TgfkaTrichter2 ай бұрын
@@ldd4043 which is by itself a telling statement about the quality of all these arguments for god. If Someone like Alex, who probably knows and understands all the common arguments for god and tries to steelman every single one of them as much as possible, thinks that an argument that can be broken down to: "we don't know therefore god", is the best one, then the arguments for god must be really bad.
@voskresenie-Ай бұрын
@@TgfkaTrichter can you imagine any argument for the existence of God that couldn't be reframed as 'we don't know, therefore God'? I don't mean actually real proofs, I mean even in some hypothetical. Like if God came down from the sky, said, 'I'm God btw', and whisked us off to heaven. 'Well, I don't know how that happened, and God is the only explanation that makes any sense, but maybe it's just something else we don't know.' Anything that could possibly prove God's existence could be explained as 'well, it's either that God is real, or something else that we don't know'. That's how literally every proof that isn't mathematically precise works, ie every single proof outside of the fields of math, computer science, and logic.
@landonpontius24782 ай бұрын
but we have NO IDEA what the actual probability is for Fine Tuning? Someone please correct me but there seems to be a big jump from "these constants wouldn't support life (as we know it) if they were altered a very small amount" to "and that means they're proportionally improbable." It's a very interesting thing to discuss but it's purely speculation until we actually know what sets those constants (if we ever do).
@jofsky90662 ай бұрын
@@landonpontius2478 no correction needed, you are right, we currently have no idea whether the constants are necessary, random or set by something. This is the reason why I personally find this argument to be annoying at the very least and aggravating at worst. Essentially the argument for fine tunning is: -correctly stating that the constants are fine tuned, -saying they could be random (with no justification or support) -coming up with a big scary number (with no justification or support) -filling this self created probabilistic hole in our understanding with God
@landonpontius24782 ай бұрын
@@jofsky9066 well said. I even think using the term "finely tuned" is a bit dishonest. The constants do appear to be "precise" or "necessary" in some sense but using "tuned" smuggles in so much theistic intuition.
@PawelLachowicz.2 ай бұрын
yep, since we can live on the worst tuned universe - it's pretty random and chaotic. How many other universes do we know to compare? Or maybe there's no other possible values of for those constants? Or maybe there are billions possibilities and billions form of matter we can't even imagine - since we know so little about matter in this universe?
@Unclenate10002 ай бұрын
You are correct it is completely an assumption that they could be any different much less how different they need to be for this to apply
@enderwiggen36382 ай бұрын
The constants have been individually studied and variations of their values is known to be detrimental. The atheists look for something scientific to prove or disprove God. That’s a dangerous approach as God isn’t a part of our universe and is not subject to the laws within it.
@gumslinger1116 күн бұрын
Its an interesting phenomenon, but Ive never found it that compelling. There's no precedent whatsoever for the idea that the physical constants are arbitrary. And we've all heard the list of other potential explanations, design being among them. Most people don't fear this argument, because it has multiple equally unproveable possible explanations. It just doesn't go anywhere.
@phillipjones292411 күн бұрын
The constants came from somewhere. Something happened that decided them. There is no reason understood by science why the strength of gravity is what it is. So it's not that it's arbitrary, but how did the constants end up this way?
@JacobSyphax27 күн бұрын
The more I think about this argument the less compelling it gets, I think what atheists mean is that it is a decent reasoning compared to other arguments. In the end, I don't in any way see how this proves the truth of any man made religion like Islam and Christianity because the second you open one of their books the first idea you get is no way this is coming from a creator of the universe.
@mwetter17 күн бұрын
I appreciate your sentiment, but you're trying to connect two things that are unrelated. This is merely an argument for the existence of God, it has nothing to do with which God or if that God has even been revealed in a known religion. So, I'm uncertain why what you said would make the argument less compelling, as the argument doesn't deal with anything you mentioned. It's simply "is there a God... yes/no" and this is one reason to consider towards that question, nothing further.
@JacobSyphax17 күн бұрын
@mwetter I reckon I kinda misrepresented my thought in comment due to laziness I guess and upon reading your response I thought I owe you a clarification 😅. In fact, I never meant to say that this argument dis/proves god, they were completely different ideas that I pronounced in the same instance because of the fact I'm not a native English speaker. What I meant to say that this argument doesn't help any religion in particular so it can be used by Muslim, Christian or even an Zoroastrian. And when I want to study a religion I look at its texts instead of this farfetched arguments that change nothing (at least for me), because at the end of the day I don't care what people want to worship I just want to know that what they believe doesn't call for my death (cough Islam cough). Peace.
@mwetter16 күн бұрын
@ thanks so much for clarifying, that totally makes sense!
@TroyLeavitt9 күн бұрын
I don't find the fine-tuning argument compelling because, if we are evolved products of the universe, it must necessarily look like it was designed for us. In other words, we evolved to fit the universe, we should expect it to look like we are finely-tuned products of it. Oxygen doesn't exist so we can breathe, instead we evolved to breathe oxygen. Same thing all the way down.
@Mario_Sky_5217 күн бұрын
Your argument is a big assumption. We could never know that we adapted to our environment without evidence of that. No proof of that whatsoever. Earth has always been similar. Oxygen does exist so we can breathe. Just try going to any planet in our system. Nothing could ever evolve there and nothing ever has or will. Out atmosphere is a precise formula of gases, not any old ratios. But the cosmological constant's tolerance is the one you should look up. Said to be equivalent to firing a gun at one end of the galaxy and hitting a 25 cent piece at the other end, 13 billion light years away. That, they said is so accurate that just one grain of sand more or less to the total mass and we wouldn't be here. Has nothing to do with evolution. That's why the fine tuning is such a great argument for God.
@snowcat93086 күн бұрын
@@Mario_Sky_521 We have plenty of evidence to suggest that our understanding of Evolution, the age of the Earth, and the age of the universe are correct. We know that life started on Earth BEFORE the atmosphere had oxygen in it, and that the oxidation of our atmosphere caused an extinction event (look up the Great Oxidation Event). It's always crazy to me how you Christians will deny some consensus science (Evolution, the age of the Earth/universe), but pull from the SAME consensus science in the next breath. The Cosmological Constant is used to describe the energy density of space and the accelerating expansion of our universe, both of which are directly related to the Big Bang (and our current understanding of both is dependent upon our current understanding of the age of the universe, which is roughly 13.8 billion years). So which is it? Is science real, or not? Or is it only real when it agrees with the conclusions you got from your old book?
@AnthoniePerez-v1e3 күн бұрын
We evolved to fit the universe? So everything that ever happened by chance (since we’re taking God out of the picture) is all pure coincidence and we’re just lucky enough to have “evolved” to live in these conditions. Idk man. That’s A-lot of luck on our side 😂😂 13.8 billion years and we’re here by chance because we’ve “evolved”
@snowcat93082 күн бұрын
@@AnthoniePerez-v1e Life (as far as we know) only started evolving on Earth around 4 billion years ago. That said, life that was incapable of surviving long enough to reproduce (at any point in time, under any circumstances) failed to persist. The life that did persist is around today! When it comes to the evolution of life on Earth, there are literally ZERO gaps to hide a god in. As for the fundamental forces/constants of our universe, we know much less about these. What would the universe look like if they changed? Could they even change, or are they simply a function of the very nature of the universe itself? We don't know! A lot of people see that "We don't know!" as a gap they can put a god in. A lot of other people (myself included) would immediately identify that as a "God of the Gaps" fallacy, and point out that every other gap you've tried to hide him in has been filled with scientific knowledge about the natural world and left no room for speculation about the supernatural.
@Mario_Sky_521Күн бұрын
@@AnthoniePerez-v1e 140 fine tuned parameters total, and they are all coincidences is delusional.
@Gaethereal2 ай бұрын
Hi, I'm an atheist. I was recommended this by youtube out of the blue. As a self proclaimed layman, I don't find Sinababu's hypothesis or your refutation to be that good, as they seem to be going past the core argument of fine tuning and attributing agency unfounded, by matter or by God. And whilst I can't say as to intent, I think it's ranked high amongst atheists because it's logically deceiving rather than its soundness. However, this was a well put together video, and I do hope you make more. It'd be cool to hear more about this from those who would have more understanding than I. If anyone read this long comment, ty.
@DaveJohnson-d7i2 ай бұрын
Guys like you who respectfully lay out your objections instead of throwing a fit are very refreshing
@CarrieLaffs2 ай бұрын
I considered myself an atheist searching for Truth until searching for the Truth led to the Truth being revealed to me.... No one appeared to me in a vision, I heard no audible voice, but ...I began to SEE everything for what it actually is. I could not admit there was a God bc to do that would be to validate the fact that we stand before a righteous and holy God who will one day pour out his final wrath and judgment on us whether we believe it or not. Faith , which is evidence of things unseen, not "I've decided to think God is real bc I feel like it" , comes to us by hearing . Bc , believe me, I was not looking for evidence to prove the God of the Bible . But once you starting getting hit with the wisdom of God .... there's no way I could ever deny Him ...
@thephilosophicalagnostic2177Ай бұрын
The worst part of the argument is the assumption we know enough to put percentages on the likelihood of how things turned out during the history of the universe. We don't even know if there was a beginning of the universe.
@brucelansberg5485Ай бұрын
@@CarrieLaffs _"Faith , which is evidence of things unseen, not "I've decided to think God is real bc I feel like it" , comes to us by hearing . Bc , believe me, I was not looking for evidence to prove the God of the Bible . But once you starting getting hit with the wisdom of God .... there's no way I could ever deny Him ..."_ Now change te word "god" for or "chemtrails" and see what happens. Faith is NOT evidence of anything other than the concept you have faith in. It's nothing more than a figment of the imagination. Sorry mate, but faith being evidence of anything else, well, it just sounds a bit out of touch.
@_SloppyhamАй бұрын
@@CarrieLaffsto me, this just seems like another way of saying “atheists are liars” at the end
@TheCatholicNerd2 ай бұрын
7:15 as to the envelope thing, they already have Moses and the prophets, if they don't believe because of them, or because Jesus rose from the dead, they're not going to believe because of a magic trick as you said.
@Nemo124172 ай бұрын
@@TheCatholicNerd - Thomas believed specifically because he was granted evidence on demand. Even Jesus, who was furious at him for critical thinking instead of faith, acknowledged this. - if people won't believe the words of an old book, they won't believe miracles. Pick one. Where was the Bible wrong?
@SoundbrigadeАй бұрын
@@Nemo12417Was it ever right?!
@patrickthomas21192 ай бұрын
For myself as someone that formerly identified as an atheist (I would not call myself a true believer but more a reluctant agnostic theist) it was not fine tuning alone that gave me pause; but a cumulation* of many aspects of reality that seem to operate under convenient behavior; especially at a sub atomic level but then countered against the likelihood that these conveniences all would exist by mere chance. As an atheist that prided myself on being as objectively skeptical as I could, the idea of randomness being behind these conveniences (quarks behavior, the constants, formation of hydrogen given presence of muons, origin of life, emergence of consciousness etc) then it is an even bigger miracle than a man raising from the dead. It is not that I found the fine tuning argument convenience; but the lack of tuning or guidance just seems a less likely possibility. Edit: the type of near mockery alternative explanations that Neil Sinhababu comes up with here is yet another reason I disassociated from atheism. These types of arguments (string 'theory', steady state theory, any cyclic universe theories, and this bit of nonsense about 'Electrons in love') are all based on absolutely nothing scientific and are nothing more then unobservable speculations and maybe some theoretical mathematics thrown in to try to act as some kind of 'proof'. They come up with these explanations to try to disprove God, but what they do is change nothing about the ability to create the laws of physics and the universe, instead they just try to deny that the 'creator' has a will. I find the argument that the universe was sparked by 'forces that exist outside of time, space, and the laws of nature' indistinguishable from the argument that the 'forces' are the product of a mind.
@haitaelpastor9762 ай бұрын
Keep in mind that God, being omnipotent, can make anything in any way he wants. Those constants, for him, are arbitrary. If he wanted those constants to have different values and still support the formation of stellar bodies, life, or whatever... he could have done so, and the result would not change. By arguing that "those constants are very precise and fine tuned", you're denying God's omnipotence. You're unadvertedly stating that God was not to choose the value of those constants, but that they couldn't be otherwise. What does that mean? God was bound to FOLLOW RULES. And who created those rules? If other being above him, he's not omnipotent. If it was God himself, again, the values of those constants are really arbitrary, and its exact values don't matter.
@patrickthomas21192 ай бұрын
@@haitaelpastor976 I do not agree, God (if one does exist) would have things like logic and reason as innate characteristics; which means that even as omnipotent would not be able to create logical impossibilities and paradoxes. Your protest in itself is a paradox. This is like saying "Can God sin? if no, then he is not all powerful and can not do anything and therefor is not God. If God can sin, then he is by his own definition an imperfect being and cannot be all powerful and therefor is not God". the conclusion does not follow the premise. What is more likely if a God exists is that creation is what it is because it is literally impossible to be any other way. God would have to violate one of his own characteristics in order to create a universe/reality capable of impossibilities and paradoxes. Such as sentient protons.
@haitaelpastor9762 ай бұрын
@@patrickthomas2119 Why are sentient protons an impossibility or paradox? If they are, why is it that there could be no other way? From where did those rules come? Did God create those rules and by doing so he made himself not omnipotent?
@patrickthomas21192 ай бұрын
@@haitaelpastor976 that is a complex question fallacy. What we know of reality and how minds work; sentience in a sub atomic particle is not possible. You might as well ask "why is the sky green in the multiverse equivalent of earth". asking absurd questions does not invalidate the premise. And you can also ask the "why god did it this way and not that way" indefinitely; where the goal is not to actually understand but to make excuses to make your own opinion feel more validated. On the question of rules; you are asking it is in the wrong direction; if logic and reason are innate to the God character, it means that it didn't create or follow those rules as things to be followed, it simply IS those things. What this would mean is; God cannot do things that are contradictory to its own nature. not because it is a rule but because it would contradict itself; thus making it a paradox. You are trying to demand an answer to a paradoxical problem you have created.
@CelticSpiritsCoven2 ай бұрын
@@haitaelpastor976 God is the alpha and the omega. Nothing came before him. Not even the rules that operate the universe- because he allowed them to by the power of his holy spirit. God is a certain nature, and he doesn't do things that are against his nature. God gave you free will, and you are the one who makes their own actions and thoughts.
@Pheer77721 күн бұрын
Maybe I’m missing something but I really don’t fine the argument that impressive. It’s like saying “man what is the probability that I’d have been born to my exact parents?” It conditions were different you’d just be asking about those conditions about a different set of parents. Similarly, if the universe didn’t happen to be tuned for life, there’d be nobody around to ponder the question. In a sense, the question can only be asked in a universe that would support it, so it’s kind of not that impressive imo. I think the possible immateriality of consciousness is a much more interesting avenue to explore.
@milansvancara19 күн бұрын
Oh so there is a sane person in the comment section, thank "god":D
@abelhgds16 күн бұрын
The fine-tuning argument isn’t just about us existing but about the universe’s constants being incredibly precise-far beyond what chance would allow. This precision suggests intent, pointing to a Creator rather than random coincidence.
@Pheer77716 күн бұрын
@ rolling a 67 on a 100 sided die is also precise, but it would have come up as something no matter what, it just looks precise in retrospect
@petrvokas850611 күн бұрын
@@abelhgds They are precise... they are what they are... we dont even know if they can vary. We have only this universe and nothing else to compare to. Yes, we can imagine that universe (as we know it) wouldnt exists if some of those values would be different. But we dont know if a universe with different values can exists or if those values can even be different. Its like trying to calculate probability of a dice roll without knowing how many sides that dice have.
@abelhgds11 күн бұрын
@@petrvokas8506 The fine-tuning argument doesn't assume we know the constants can vary; it highlights that, if they could, even slight changes would render a life-permitting universe improbable. This observation isn't about probability per se but about the remarkable precision observed, which invites deeper explanation regardless of whether alternative universes exist.
@anglicanaesthetics2 ай бұрын
I saw the thumbnail and thought "nooo I wanna know" and then you said it in the first 10 seconds and merited all time off purgatory (maybe idk) :P
@kze242 ай бұрын
I'm a Protestant, so I don't believe in purgatory, but to me, it was kind of obvious that it was fine tuning in the thumbnail.
@msmd3295Ай бұрын
Ask this dude to demonstrate that natural laws are improbable laws . From what evidence is he concluding that natural law is improbable in a natural universe. There’s a hidden preconceived bias being presented here. That bias is he refuses to acknowledge there isn’t anything about the physical universe that requires a supernatural creator. Matter inherently has its own nature, has affinities for other matter, the very structure of the physical universe operates according to those affinities. Without natural physical laws the universe would just be a mass of chaos. And there is nothing about physical matter that requires it had to have been created & organized by some supernatural deity.
@shassett792 ай бұрын
The funny thing about the fine-tuning argument is that it seems to overlook the reality that an omnipotent god could cause life to exist under any set of circumstances, and certainly wouldn't be constrained to work within a single, highly-specific set of physical constants.
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
Yup. We live where it is possible for us to live naturally. We evolved where it was possible for us to evolve naturally. But if an all-powerful god actually existed, he wouldn't have that limitation. We could live in the vacuum of space or in the heart of a sun - anywhere, really, since his magic would make it possible. Funny how gods never do anything that would actually require a god to exist, isn't it?
@shassett792 ай бұрын
@@Bill_Garthright I feel like the one property we can reasonably assign to gods is their apparent desire to make it seem like they don't exist. Maybe they're just shy?
@gabrielm11802 ай бұрын
this argument is against the notion of an chaotic meaningless universe.
@shassett792 ай бұрын
@@gabrielm1180 Right. So what's the justification for the presupposition that all other permutations of physical constants would necessarily lead to a chaotic and meaningless universe?
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
@@shassett79 _"Maybe they're just shy?"_ Sure seems like it, huh? I mean, what _else_ could it be, right? :)
@jonaslussi386614 күн бұрын
I always find it amusing because the fine tuning argument actually refutes the idea of an all powerful god, if life couldnt exist with slightly different constants, that means god isnt all powerful because he couldnt put life forms in such a universe. If god is all powerful, he can put lifeforms in any universe with any constants.
@nathaniel526113 күн бұрын
Its certainly at best alludes to a half-ass god considering the mountain of “design” flaws in the mix. Thats for sure
@rizdekd391213 күн бұрын
It does seem odd that on one day, on one occasion they are arguing for the fine tuned world that was made ever so carefully to found/support life but on the next day/occasion/argument the natural world is a random mess, a concoction of chaos and miscellaneous quagmire of unguided activity which absolutely could NOT have spawned life naturally. These same people guffaw at researchers trying to figure how life may have started naturally when in reality, these researchers would be exploring and trying to discover the greatest fine tuning achievement of all...God fine tuning the world SO THAT life could arise naturally and evolve into all the different kinds we see today. " If god is all powerful, he can put lifeforms in any universe with any constants." Or with no natural constants or components at all. Proof of this is their belief in supernatural life forms which have intelligence and free will.
@brianmonks865720 күн бұрын
Fine tuning is an assertion, not an argument. Demonstrate that any constant could have been different before it can become an argument. After you demonstrate that any of the constants could have been different then you need to demonstrate the probability..... How many constants could have been different? How many options do each of those constants have? What is the distribution of those options? if there is only one constant that could have been different, and there was a trillion options, and 95% of the time it is what this universe has, would you really be surprised the value is what it is? Fine tuning is an empty assertion pretending to be meaningful, and hoping nobody thinks about it rationally.
@0live0wire02 ай бұрын
TAG all the way, baby. Fine-tuning sounds convincing but I could brush it off easily if I assume a skeptical worldview. At best all it proves is a deistic clockmaker god who wounded up the initial mechanism and disappeared from the world.
@uverpro35982 ай бұрын
“Electrons in Love” would be a cool name for a song.
@chernobylcoleslaw66982 ай бұрын
Sounds like a minor '80s hit! 😂
@uverpro35982 ай бұрын
@@chernobylcoleslaw6698 My thoughts exactly! I spent like 20 mins singing a synthpop song in my head.
@uhuuuuu29 күн бұрын
The fine tuning argument confuses me. Because how exactly IS it an argument? You can't prove that there is a chance at the universe being different from what it is. Wich ofcourse means you cant say its unlikely for it to be the way it is.
@Emcron2 ай бұрын
as a Catholic who has an amateur interest in astrophysics, I like this argument best.
@maxmaximus26082 ай бұрын
As an atheist with the same interest, I agree. It just doesn’t convince me since I believe that we lack the fundamental understanding of what reality actually is. And therefore all attempts to determine probabilities are somewhat meaningless in my opinion.
@silvercrownt19 күн бұрын
@@maxmaximus2608As an atheist, it's one of the silliest arguments, not that any diest argument is good. If the universe didn't support life, you wouldn't be here to ponder about it. It's 100% chance that for a sentient being to ponder about reality, reality must support the existence of sentient beings. The fine tuning arguement is the equivalent of asking me if I feel lucky that I wasn't born a rock in a volcano. No because if "i" was a rock I wouldn't be me or be conscious. Aren't you lucky you were born on earth? No. There is no luck involved. I wasn't going to be born in Jupiter's gas clouds suffocating instantly, how would I?
@Konxovar02 ай бұрын
I didn't know what the "Electrons in Love" argument was, but I had heard that it was a devastating argument against Fine Tuning. I came away from that thinking, "What? How on earth is this supposed to be a good argument? There are so many false or unbacked assumptions with so many possible responses."
@patrickthomas21192 ай бұрын
the idea behind it, I think, is that it is almost supposed to be almost a mockery and get christians to recognize that the arguments for God and fine tuning are also false or backed by assumptions. Like most arguments against the existence of a creator with a mind, they are only arguments against claims of theism and not really arguments for claims of atheism. Atheism by design is a critical perspective that scrutinizes the claims of any and all religious thought and demands to be convinced for claims they don't agree with. The part i find annoying about this (as someone that used to identify as an atheist) is atheist do not hold their own claims and positions to the same scrutiny. It is all attacking others and never self reflecting. This is one of the reasons I stopped identifying as an atheist some time ago.
@Boundless_Border2 ай бұрын
I'm curious what false or unbacked assumptions you see within the argument. While I understand it may not be compelling, there doesn't appear to be much to support.
@Konxovar02 ай бұрын
@@Boundless_Border The argument assumes that the world we live in is mind-unfriendly, because not everything has a mind, and that just because God didn't create the world one way He must not have created it the way it actually is. Even if God could have created the world with more minds with such simple bodies, why is that superior to the amount of minds there are with the complexity of bodies that we have? I certainly don't think it is.
@Boundless_Border2 ай бұрын
@Konxovar0 The first assumption is a premise of the FTA. So you confused me a bit since I couldn't tell which argument you were criticizing. The argument doesn't assume that a god doesn't create the world with the follow up conclusion that a god couldn't create the world. The argument doesn't propose that simple bodies are superior. The argument is trying to show that simple bodies are compatible with types of worlds the proposed god could make. Which you seem to be somewhat in board with. Thanks for sharing what you took issue with.
@justingribble982720 сағат бұрын
Where in the Bible does it teach praying to anyone other than God is ok. Prayer is worship and supplication, shouldn't do these things towards anyone other than God. For example, Mary or any saint...
@AlamarianJ2 ай бұрын
I find it strange so many atheists regard the fine tuning argument so highly when I think it sucks. If that was the best argument for God, I’d still be agnostic. We don’t know what the possible values of the cosmological constants are. We don’t have a clue. So how can we know how improbable the universe is? We can’t. Argument dead. The moral argument, argument from contingency and from motion, even the ontological argument, all seem much sounder to me.
@Tinesthia2 ай бұрын
I wouldn’t say they rate it highly. Just less terrible and taking more thought then some of the other travesties that apologists call arguments.
@piens5115 күн бұрын
@@Tinesthiathe stuff I have heard man... The bar for passable argument here is really low.
@travismorgado1142 ай бұрын
The problem with the fine tuning argument is that it pre-supposes so many things, how can we prove that the universe could've been any other way? How do we know life is contingent on these fine tunings? How do we know the universe is contingent on these tunings? How do we know that the fine tuning of the universe requires a supernatural creator?
@silvercrownt19 күн бұрын
As an atheist, it's one of the silliest arguments, not that any diest argument is good. If the universe didn't support life, you wouldn't be here to ponder about it. It's 100% chance that for a sentient being to ponder about reality, reality must support the existence of sentient beings. The fine tuning arguement is the equivalent of asking me if I feel lucky that I wasn't born a rock in a volcano. No because if "i" was a rock I wouldn't be me or be conscious. Aren't you lucky you were born on earth? No. There is no luck involved. I wasn't going to be born in Jupiter's gas clouds suffocating instantly, how would I?
@criticalthinker80072 ай бұрын
So how did you calculate the probability that the universe was fine tune? How did you calculate the probality of other options? How did you calculate the probability that a super natural being could even exist?
@silvercrownt19 күн бұрын
As an atheist, it's one of the silliest arguments, not that any diest argument is good. If the universe didn't support life, you wouldn't be here to ponder about it. It's 100% chance that for a sentient being to ponder about reality, reality must support the existence of sentient beings. The fine tuning arguement is the equivalent of asking me if I feel lucky that I wasn't born a rock in a volcano. No because if "i" was a rock I wouldn't be me or be conscious. Aren't you lucky you were born on earth? No. There is no luck involved. I wasn't going to be born in Jupiter's gas clouds suffocating instantly, how would I?
@criticalthinker800719 күн бұрын
@@silvercrownt Well said if life was design for this universe we would be dependent on hydrogen and helium not oxygen and water.
@Hfxnn2 ай бұрын
for me the best argument is in the moral sphere. cause when i was an atheist i realized that the logical conclusion of my worldview at the time was moral relativism. and in all honesty i couldn’t look at something like the holocaust and not say it’s objectively wrong.
@fujikokun2 ай бұрын
Other than personal experience, I think this is what penetrates for most converts.
@Oneocna2 ай бұрын
You still are a moral relativist You cant believe in the fine tuning argument (teleological argument) and believe that there's suffering and evil in the world. Whatever explanation you come up with for god allowing evil (theodicy) is an argument from ignorance since god finely tuned all things in the universe include natural and human evil. Its like saying "I believe in a perfect watchmaker who made this perfect watch" and an atheist says "What about that chunk of metal in the metal that blocks the gears" and your response is "Oh I agree that that part is bad and can be better and the perfect watchmaker could and would make it better but since I don't know him i'm going to guess why that imperfect metal was placed there instead of assuming its part of the perfect design" Basically you are asserting a position (good or evil) relative to an event in the world (the metal in the watch)
@RightCross222 ай бұрын
This one really moved me too. Once I realized (as an atheist) that nothing objectively matters and there was no such thing as right or wrong it was too much to handle. I knew deep down that right and wrong did exist and that evil was real. It wasn’t too much longer after that when I became a believer
@williamthompson47612 ай бұрын
@@Oneocna God DID create a perfect world. Humans F----ed it up.
@redbepis46002 ай бұрын
then why did god let it happen? Actually let me rephrase. Why did god knowingly set of a chain of events that he knew was guaranteed to lead to it?
@jimurban53672 ай бұрын
The “probabilities” like the ten-royal-flushes one are purely speculative, as we have no idea about the total possible number of combinations of values that the fundamental constants could have taken on. Heck, can you demonstrate that there is even one possible combination of values besides the one we know? If not, then you have no argument.
@bridgetgress2 ай бұрын
Yes we do. We have tons of other planets that don't meet the conditions to support life. Why did ANY of them develop in this way?
@jimurban53672 ай бұрын
@@bridgetgress The Argument from Fine-Tuning deals with the values of the fundamental constants of physics: the strong nuclear force, the weak nuclear force, the gravitational constant, and electromagnetism. It does not deal with the conditions of Earth compared to the conditions of other planets. That said, we know very little about the life-supporting capability of the overwhelming majority of planets in the universe, which means we don’t know the denominator nor the numerator in the probability calculation of (number of planets that can support life)/(total number of planets).
@bridgetgress2 ай бұрын
@@jimurban5367 Are you an astrophysicist
@billwilliams72852 ай бұрын
Agreed, to day we don't know is perfectly acceptable. Which is why research is on going. To just attribute this supposed fine tuning to a God and stop looking for reasons, os just another example of the tree from the garden! It is deeply rooted in theists this teaching, it keeps them in check, through fear! The one emotion to control all that allow this emotion to control them! This has been known from 1000s of years, and it is still relevant today! Only now, it is ordinary people instilling this fear and spreading it. For the purpose of togetherness.
@Mish8442 ай бұрын
@@jimurban5367 moreover, people seem to forget that with each planet being statistically independent from others, scale of the universe works against this argument, since 1% is not an intuitively scary probability when I have million tries.
@gfujigo2 ай бұрын
As a classical theist, the fine tuning argument is not at all a proof for God as we classical theists define God. Whether or not the universe is fine tuned is irrelevant to whether or not God exists. Even if the universe were not fine tuned for life the universe is still contingent and thus has its cause beyond itself.
@chriscrilly8807Ай бұрын
Pre-sup gobbledigook
@RuruRuru1452 ай бұрын
Christopher Hitchens' voice is so fine tuned so that it only comes through my left speaker lol Good video btw
@smart_joey_41792 ай бұрын
Same lol
@ThisDonut2 ай бұрын
Thats hilarious. I had only my right earbud in and heard nothing lol
@HarryNicNicholas2 ай бұрын
is that a joke of some sort?
@herroyung8572 ай бұрын
Terrible video. It doesn't address the biggest objection to fine tuning: why assume that the constants came into existence from a cosmic dice roll? Yes, when you plug different numbers into an equation, it yields universes that cannot produce life. This is not evidence that those different numbers are even possible, since we can only observe our current set of constants. There is no evidence that the constants could be anything else at all; we have a single universe with a single set of constants, and no other observations.
@e_out2 ай бұрын
I was listening with just one earbud and for a good 10 or 15 seconds thought "wow that's crazy, he had no response at all!"
@roman7272 ай бұрын
i will protest every video till Trent Fine Tunes and Brings Mafia Trent back lol
@TheClapped2 ай бұрын
Is that a character he had in older videos lol?
@Malygosblues2 ай бұрын
He's gonna make you an apologetic you can't refute
@roman7272 ай бұрын
@@Malygosblues HAHAHA
@kze242 ай бұрын
Are you going to protest the lack of Mafia Trent until you become Protestant?
Thanks for this video. The title made me laugh! It's not related at all to the actual contents of the video, or course, but as clickbait, it's pretty funny.
@SharedPhilosophy2 ай бұрын
11:31 this is where I take issue with this rebuttal for the electrons in love argument. "Imagining these electrons, doeasn't mean that this state of affairs could actually happen." I respond exactly the same way to the fine-tuning argument. Just because we can imagine that the universe could be nothing, or never harbor life, doesn't mean this state of affairs can actually happen, as far as we know this may be the only option the universe in its laws. Great video, though. Your videos are definitely among my favorites when it comes to theistic arguments and the discussion surrounding God's existence.
@TheCounselofTrent2 ай бұрын
I think there is a big difference. With electrons in love we are imagining an entirely new kind of being existing, a conscious particle. In contrast, imagining the value of the constants being different is just a difference in degree. It's like the difference between imagining a world where fish swim 5% faster and a world where fish can talk. The former seems at least a little more possible. And even if the constants couldn't be different, the situation is still weird. It's like walking into a room with 80 million combinations on a thermostat and only 100 degrees are life sustaining. Suppose the thermostat for some reason is stuck in that range and can't be changed. It's very strange it just happens to be stuck (i.e. couldn't be any different) in the life permitting range. And thanks for the kind words!
@herroyung8572 ай бұрын
@@TheCounselofTrent It is not strange at all that it happens to be stuck in the life permitting range. The only reason that it seems strange is that you're subconsciously treating the other ranges on the thermostat as being remotely plausible, which is precisely the assumption that the "unchangeable constants" perspective denies. Just because we can fiddle with numbers in an equation, it doesn't lend an iota of evidence to the idea that the universe's constants could be anything aside from what they are now. Our imagination is not evidence of anything at all. All we can observe is a single set of constants, and given this observation, it is completely irrational to assume any other constants are possible until we have evidence of this. Human intuition is fundamentally flawed when used to evaluate the universe as a whole.
@twalrus98332 ай бұрын
@@herroyung857 We also have no evidence that the climate of the earth can be any different than what it is right now. But we trust climate scientists who make models based on hypothetical past scenarios. To deny the possibility of different past human behavior that effects the climate means you deny any alternative timelines/universes as well as free will. We can come to conclusions in hypotheticals even though we ourselves cannot make that situation happen. Maybe, it is *necessary* that free will doesn't exist and the universal constants must *necessarily* be what they are and humans must *necessarily* be the only known beings with high level consciousness. But I'd much rather have one necessary thing than the many random conditions that must be untouchable.
@herroyung8572 ай бұрын
@@twalrus9833 You are comparing phenomena we observe within the universe to phenomena outside of the universe. From our past observations of the Earth's climate, we can easily derive future observations. This is science. We discover patterns within our observations of the universe, and we seek mechanisms and frameworks that explain and predict those patterns. What is not science is extending our assumptions and intuitions derived from the universe to outside of the universe, if that's a concept that even makes sense. All that we can observe is our universe, so how can you possibly make any assumptions on what alternate universes might be? Any analogies involving observations of our universe simply fail. Phenomena we observe on Earth do not translate to phenomena that may or may not exist separate from our universe. Why? Because there is no evidence that there is anything other than our universe, while there is boatloads of evidence regarding the state of affairs of Earth. I will repeat myself once more. Intuitions derived from our observations of our universe do not apply to speculations on phenomena outside of our universe, because we have never observed anything outside of our universe and therefore have nothing with which to develop an intuition. "But I'd much rather have one necessary thing than the many random conditions that must be untouchable." First, no one is saying that the random conditions are untouchable. We are saying that given the current evidence, arguments in support of God are fundamentally flawed and irrational. And until proven otherwise, it is unreasonable to simply assume that the universe could be any other way, and then to use this bald assertion as an argument for God. Second, the way you're framing this "necessary" rhetoric is objectionable. I am not defending a "necessary" universe or a "necessary" cosmos/multiverse containing the universe. I am simply pointing out that the most honest position is "I don't know yet" and it's irrational to choose the "necessary" God over the other claims when you cannot demonstrate that God is more probable.
@zebo6162Ай бұрын
@@herroyung857 I appreciate your desire for evidence, but as you say human intuition can never be enough to "prove" anything outside the observable universe in the same way that we can "prove" phenomena here on Earth. This is because the scientific method was created with certain fundamental principles in mind, and one of these was that it only applies to the physical and natural world. This is why there are different "kinds" of knowledge; the kind that the scientific method produces is empirical, whereas the kinds of philosophical knowledge being discussed here is fundamentally different. I don't understand, then, why you require or even expect empirical knowledge (that is, knowledge based on observation) when you admit there isn't a way to acquire this knowledge in the first place, as you can't observe outside the universe? See, the crux of your original reply is that there is an unproven assumption those making the fine-tuning argument are making, and that is that the physical constants we see in the universe COULD be different. In your eyes, since there is no evidence the constants COULD be different, the argument is thus "flawed", "irrational", etc. While it is true we can't PROVE the constants could be different, and thus the argument is contingent on the constants being able to be different, I want to point out again that we are not talking about empirical knowledge, and thus the burden of proof is not on those making the fine-tuning argument to prove this to be the case. Rather, it becomes a subjective evaluation of how "reasonable" it is for these constants to possibly be different, as opposed to the subjective evaluation of how "reasonable" it is for these constants to be necessary. In my opinion the former seems much more reasonable, but if to you the latter seems more compelling, that's fine, but you would then need to DEFEND that point. Simply saying "you can't prove yours definitively with empirical evidence" is a non-starter because we will never be able to do that (since we ourselves lack the perspecive that an omnipotent Being would), and to then call anyone making either argument "irrational" seems silly. TL;DR I think you misunderstand the kind of knowledge that is being discussed, and that causes you to see a necessary but unproven precondition in a philosophical argument and think the entire thing is "irrational" to argue in the first place.
@newglof95582 ай бұрын
I thought you were for sure going to say the cosmological arguments, though many atheists (even well-known ones) falsely believe that "who made God" is a competent rebuttal.
@TheAnimeAtheist2 ай бұрын
the point to replies like that is to point out that even if the "infinite regression" must have an end point, it's special pleading to declare it must be at any specific god.
@sidwhiting6652 ай бұрын
@@TheAnimeAtheist Right, so before we specify which god is THEE God, we have to get past the point of "there is no god." Can't put the cart in front of the horse and expect to have a reasonable conversation.
@smidlee77472 ай бұрын
@@TheAnimeAtheist Not when the end point of life, reason and consciousness is NOT naturalism or materialism. The most logical conclusion is reason, life and consciousness came out of eternity.
@newglof95582 ай бұрын
@@TheAnimeAtheistyou guys consistently misunderstand that God in an Abrahamic sense is not equivocal to "the gods" or "a god" in a pagan sense.
@TheAnimeAtheist2 ай бұрын
@@newglof9558 And the abrahamic god doesn't prove christianity, you still have judism and islam to distinguish from.
@EagerCentaur-kw1ov6 сағат бұрын
■■■ "PRAYING DOES NOT CHANGE GOD, but it changes him who prays." --Soren Kierkegaard
@bustopher58372 ай бұрын
Your not converting any atheist to Christianity with fine tuning tbh.
@Seanph252 ай бұрын
Objectively false tbh.
@highgrounder2 ай бұрын
Not the entire universe is hospitable to life. Just step out onto the moon without a space suit and see what happens. The universe is a myriad of different environments that each have their own shot at producing life, and when one gambles enough he eventually wins. We happen to be on Earth because Earth had the environment that was suited for life best that we know of. Statistically speaking, it’s practically impossible that the Grand Canyon exists in any one location on Earth, but Earth has so many locations that the Grand Canyon does exist, and it exists there thanks to the natural environment that molded it. In the incredible vastness of the universe with its billions of planets and dwarf planets and so forth, something was likely going to be hospitable, especially given the incredibly long amount of time to create the necessary conditions. TLDR: It’s not just one universe with one chance, it’s billions of planets with billions of chances
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
_"it’s billions of planets with billions of chances"_ Indeed, even _that_ is a gross underestimate, huh? It's more like sextillions of planets with sextillions of chances. I don't care _how_ low a chance might be, it's probably likely to happen with that many opportunities.
@brucelansberg5485Ай бұрын
@@Bill_Garthright If Trent would have had sextillion guesses to what was written inside the envelope, I'm pretty sure he would have guessed correctly in the end. It's a flaw in his reasoning he overlooked.
@Bill_GarthrightАй бұрын
@@brucelansberg5485 One of many. :)
@claudio-18962 ай бұрын
I am a [protestant] Christian, and Trent Horn is one of my favorites, more eloquent and effective apologists these days. Thank you for your work, brother!
@newglof95582 ай бұрын
The most convincing argument against atheism: P1: Atheism is gay P2: Being gay is wrong C: Atheism is wrong
@Anglicanism_go_brr_JLY2 ай бұрын
Brilliant
@kze242 ай бұрын
Athiests fear this commenter above all else
@wp58752 ай бұрын
Hilarious if facetiousness but I suspect this is what you believe.
@mouikafa-qn1gn2 ай бұрын
😂😂
@Isaac_L..2 ай бұрын
I'm not sure if I'm laughing with you or laughing at you, but I'm laughing all the same.
@Isaac_L..2 ай бұрын
As an atheist the fine tuning of the universe for intelligent life is easily the single biggest challange to my current beliefs. Ultimately though I think theres other explinations aside from theism that can explain fine tuning (deism, simulation theory, pan theism, etc.) which are all cumulatively just as or more likely than theism to me. I also think that the probability of fine tuning given theism is grossly overestimated by theists (I still think its relatively high but not a near certainty as most theists take as a given). Still a very strong arguement for theism nonetheless.
@jm3292 ай бұрын
It isn’t.
@velkyn12 ай бұрын
why since there is no evdience for it at all? It's notable how these cultists claim "fine tuning" shows that their god exists, but when shown how this god's supposed "design" fails hilariously, they have to make excuses for this god.
@SoundbrigadeАй бұрын
Look at it this way: Fine tuning is a cardboard box you will use to pack things into. In order to maximize you pack your stuff in the most optimal way. If that box had other dimensions, you had it packed in another way. The the cosmic constants had been slightly different, the Universe had looked different. Now it happens to be that an electron has this charge, Plancks constant has this value etc. The fine tuning argument is much like god of the gaps argument.
@keith.anthony.infinity.hАй бұрын
Exactly but theists do not think outside of the box when it comes to what could be the explanation of fine-tuning, they automatically think God had to do it. It is simple it’s admit you do not know like the rest of us.
@stevewalker9870Ай бұрын
I have a good counterargument, the universe is very huge and very old, and yet we see no signs of life anywhere else, the fine-tuning argument would be compelling if the universe was teeming with life, but it's not, we're the only ones, and that accounts for the improbability of the formation of life There's also survivorship bias, we exist because everything lined up just right, if it hadn't, we wouldn't be here to think about this This video also completely misunderstands the electrons-in-love concept by focusing in on that one example, the point is that life could look very very different from us, why are we carbon-based multi-cellular beings instead of something else? The answer is simple: Because that's the only thing that worked here, and we're only able to contemplate these things *because* it worked
@niccolodandretta303018 күн бұрын
This absolutely does not prove ur god. It just prove that something may have created the universe. U cant even prove that only one" god" created the universe, there is a very very big gap betweem the fact that the universe may have been created by something and your specific god
@IsMort_Ex2 ай бұрын
I appreciate Trent mogging everyone in the thumbnail. It’s so real.
@ddrse2 ай бұрын
Trent may eventually come out.
@MythicKeaton2 ай бұрын
Personally, I find the cosmological argument more convincing than the fine tuning one. Just because it feels like the skeptic has more wiggle room to hand wave away the notion of God being the explanation of fine tuning by presuppossing some (currently not known) naturalistic law, compared to the cosmological one where it feels like the skeptic is more cornered into believing that God is the best explanation. Considering that before the universe, there is no nature for the skeptic to draw or presuppose a naturalistic law from.
@oscarklauss980229 күн бұрын
So its extremely, insanely difficult to create a universe with life and protect it from asteroids. And it takes cosmology, and fine tuning to discover the existence of God. Sounds very much like a God that no one has ever known, and all religions are woefully ignorant of. Not too mention omnipotence is out of the question.
@milansvancara18 күн бұрын
IKR? The most amusing about these "arguments" is that Christians almost uniformly fail to realize that none of these prove their particular God (and god of the bible is straight up contradictory to some of those). Even if God's existence was literally proven tomorrow, it would not make Christianity any less ridiculous
@killianmiller61072 ай бұрын
In line with the intelligent design argument (fine tuning), I’m also fond of the intelligibility argument. Basically this argues from one of the axioms that make science possible and effective: the fact the universe is well ordered and understandable, allowing us to observe the patterns that make the universe work. We would not expect this intelligibility given the universe originated from random chance. Even the concept of a multiverse or an infinitely repeating universe that expands and retracts needs a way of explaining why this patterned state of affairs exists. This makes most sense given an intelligent creator, the same way we can know a book with an intelligent story and setting written in it was made by an author. When scientists explain phenomena with natural laws, they may say “God didn’t do it because there’s a natural explanation” but they forget how these natural explanations themselves would have their origin in God’s design. This relates to another argument I think I made myself (as someone who studied product design), observing that the way things are is kind of arbitrary, it didn’t have to be the case that humans have 2 arms instead of 4, or that grass is green instead of purple, or that we live on a sphere instead of a disc, or that trees don’t make oxygen but flugelhorns do. From my experience designing things, you often have to make arbitrary choices as to how something looks or functions, rarely if ever is there only one way to create something (though there can be better or worse ways). So I would reason that in observing how the way things are in nature isn’t necessary, they demand something (necessary itself) that arbitrated on how _this_ is the way it will be.
@danieljakes59492 ай бұрын
Oddly enough, I have the exact same arguments for God. Still bothers me how maleness and femaleness could arise without an intentional agent behind it.
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
_"We would not expect this intelligibility given the universe originated from random chance."_ Why not? After all, we evolved _in this universe._ We evolved to understand, at least in part, the environment we evolved in, because that was a survival advantage. Note that we don't _know_ if the universe originated from random chance. And, obviously, "random chance" isn't the same thing as "unplanned," either. But if a god actually existed, then how could we expect that everything would continue the way we've come to expect? After all, according to most theists, they think that their god can do anything - literally *anything* - any time he likes, for no reason we would necessarily be able to determine. How would we be able to predict that? We couldn't. Indeed, most theists - of nearly _every_ religion - think that their god _does_ do that stuff. Everyone who believes in miracles thinks so. So the argument should be the exact opposite of what you claim, shouldn't it? Shouldn't that be evidence that your god _isn't_ real? _"it didn’t have to be the case that humans have 2 arms instead of 4"_ Yes, you're right, but only if a god exists. _If_ a creator god exists, then you're absolutely right. But if all gods are simply imaginary, then it's obvious why human beings have only two arms, rather than four. It's not a puzzle at all. An all-powerful creator god could do anything he liked. It wouldn't even have to make _sense,_ he could still do it. That's what "all-powerful" _means_ when it comes to a creator god. Heck, he could make some people have four useful arms _now,_ if he wanted. Magic can do anything at all, and all on God's mere whim. But we have two arms, instead of four, because we evolved from creatures with four limbs. And evolution is not magic. It's a natural process that works with what already exists. _That's_ why we don't have four arms. Again, it's not a mystery. And the only way we might get a human with four arms is if there's a glitch in the natural process of reproduction (like the two-headed animals which show up sometimes). _Or_ if a god is real and decides that's what he wants. Again, your argument seems exactly backwards, doesn't it? If anything, it's an argument for gods *not* being real. PS. Have you ever heard of the panda's thumb? It's one example among many - in human beings, too - which show that life _wasn't_ intelligently designed. After all, _good_ design could potentially be explained by either a god or by the natural process of evolution. Both explain good 'design.' But _bad_ design, non-optimal design, silly design - Rube Goldberg type stuff which would be stupid to actually design - only makes sense through natural, unplanned evolution. Now, obviously, we don't need good evidence that life _wasn't_ intelligently designed, as long as there's no good evidence that it _was._ But we do have that evidence, nonetheless - _lots_ of it. (The human eye is just another example among many.)
@killianmiller61072 ай бұрын
Oh hi Bill Yeah yeah we developed in this particular universe, things would be different in different worlds, so what, the intelligibility argument (and my arbitrariness argument) works for any universe that has certain arbitrary patterns that govern it. Again, ask why is it the case that “this” is the state of affairs that allows something like evolution which brings about 2-armed humans? I already said you can point to natural processes that brought about this state of affairs, that doesn’t mean God did not create those exact processes. Besides, you really don’t argue for the necessity of humans (ie all mammals) having 2 fore limbs other than their legs. Surely it’s possible certain events could have affected the way evolution developed such that mammals have 4 fore limbs. This goes to demonstrate the arbitrariness of this state of affairs, which suggests an arbiter with power and intent to choose the way the world is going to be. I’m assuming by “unplanned” you mean that natural laws just exist and don’t need outside intelligent influence to cause things to happen. Still, that only pushes the question back, you haven’t answered what is the origin of these laws (because they aren’t necessary, they are arbitrary). Without an intelligent designer, the only other option I’m aware of is random chance. I’m sure you heard the clarification that God can do anything that’s not logically contradictory (ie square circles). He could indeed create things we couldn’t comprehend, but it makes more sense that he would create things we could comprehend (given his intent to create us with a desire for understanding in the first place). Furthermore, just because you have the power to do something doesn’t mean you are bound to do it. God could pop into existence a flugelhorn that creates oxygen out of CO2 when you blow in it, but why would he? I don’t think theists would actually say God does things for no reason, because there’s always some intent behind a created thing. He’s already created things the way he wanted (and scripture mentions him resting from his creative work); imagine God being like “oops let me change this real quick, no reason, just cause.” That actually poses a harder problem for theists than what you think is an objection. Miracles are interesting since critics will say they violate the laws of nature (ie God’s very own laws). For one this assumes the laws are necessary (instead of being arbitrated by a creator), and for another it assumes miracles _violate_ natural law. God can have good reason to do a miracle when it brings about a good (meaning it’s not for “no reason”), like curing an illness that the human body is not naturally disposed to cure, by suspending/surpassing the law that states the body can’t fix certain health problems on its own. And it’s possible because God’s supernatural authority overpowers nature. Miracles are _above_ nature, not contrary to it. And I would say extraordinary miracles do happen (also ordinary miracles where natural things just happen to occur at the best time). I have no idea why you would think God not doing something crazy on a whim means he doesn’t exist. PS, Trent already addressed that intelligent design doesn’t automatically claim optimal design, thus vestigial structures don’t disprove theism. Besides, pandas thumbs do serve a function in grabbing things. But again, it’s as if you think theistic creation means God just pops creatures into being without any process or connection to other creatures. The very paradigm of evolution itself where we have creatures trying to survive and pass on their genes to adapt to environments over generations, this paradigm is itself arbitrary and demands an arbiter. Why shouldn’t it be the case that creatures live forever, constantly adapting their own DNA to their environment without having to mate and hope their offspring do better?
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
@@killianmiller6107 _"I already said you can point to natural processes that brought about this state of affairs, that doesn’t mean God did not create those exact processes."_ True. But it also doesn't mean that your god - or any god - _did_ create those processes. Or that any god is even real. _"Surely it’s possible certain events could have affected the way evolution developed such that mammals have 4 fore limbs."_ Not really - not mammals, at least, because four limbs were probably set before that. But at _some_ point, yes. After all, not all animals have four limbs. I'm not following your argument, though. _"This goes to demonstrate the arbitrariness of this state of affairs, which suggests an arbiter with power and intent to choose the way the world is going to be."_ I'm not sure if you and I agree on what "arbitrary" means, but why would that "suggest" anything like that? I see absolutely no connection there. And again, it wasn't "arbitrary" for human beings. _Or_ for mammals. Natural processes must work with what they've _got._ Evolution starts with what _is._ A magical designer wouldn't have that limitation. _"Still, that only pushes the question back, you haven’t answered what is the origin of these laws (because they aren’t necessary, they are arbitrary)."_ I'm quite willing to admit when I don't know something. (I wish _theists_ were as willing to admit that!) But why do you claim that those laws are "arbitrary"? How would _you_ know that? Besides, even if they _could_ have been some other way - and we have no idea if that's true or not - so what? "I don't know" doesn't mean "God done it." It really doesn't. _"I don’t think theists would actually say God does things for no reason, because there’s always some intent behind a created thing."_ You've never heard "God works in mysterious ways"? It's been my experience that theists claim all sorts of diverse, contradictory 'reasons' for things, unless they can't make up an answer they find appealing, in which case it's always "God works in mysterious ways." _"For one this assumes the laws are necessary (instead of being arbitrated by a creator)"_ There you go. You said it yourself. Earlier, you claimed that the natural laws _aren't_ necessary, but that seems to be only because you want them to have been created by your god. You're not providing any good evidence that your claims are true, you're just making claims based on what you _want_ to be true (i.e. your god), aren't you? _"And I would say extraordinary miracles do happen"_ There you go. Then you _can't_ rely on the universe being "well ordered and understandable," as you put it, because - according to _you_ - your god does "miracles" whenever he wants. Those of us who _don't_ believe in a magical being interfering whenever he wants are the ones who can expect the universe to go on as we've always experienced it to be, without magical interference. If things change, we'll have to change our minds. But we have no good reason to _expect_ 'miracles.' You do. _"pandas thumbs do serve a function in grabbing things."_ So what? This has nothing to do with "serving a function." It's about the abundant evidence that living things _weren't_ planned. The human eye serves a function, too. But only a complete idiot would design an eye with a blind spot right in the middle of it (an _unnecessary_ blind spot, as cephalopod eyes demonstrate quite clearly). _"The very paradigm of evolution itself where we have creatures trying to survive and pass on their genes to adapt to environments over generations, this paradigm is itself arbitrary and demands an arbiter."_ *Evidence?* _"Why shouldn’t it be the case that creatures live forever, constantly adapting their own DNA to their environment without having to mate and hope their offspring do better?"_ You tell me. Why didn't "God" do it that way? He would have avoided causing unnecessary suffering to billions, no, _trillions,_ of living things. Because, again, a god _could_ do that. A god _would_ be able to plan ahead. Nature can't. A god _would_ see the results of his horrific plan. Nature can't plan _at all._ And any kind of half-way decent god wouldn't want to cause such an _immense_ amount of unnecessary suffering, not just to human beings but to every other sentient creature. Nature can't feel, can't think, can't do anything deliberately. A god _could,_ if the god actually existed. (Of course, an imaginary god can't do any of that stuff, either.) Thanks for the reply!
@velkyn12 ай бұрын
that fails miserably too. In the Christian universe, the universe isn't well ordered and understandable. Your god makes it incoherent and unpredictable with its supposed miracles and interference.
@asrieldreemur18752 ай бұрын
"For the invisible things of him, from the creation of the world, are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made; his eternal power also, and divinity" Romans 1:20 DRA
@Shoomer1988Ай бұрын
Why should I care what a book with talking donkeys says?
@chriscrilly8807Ай бұрын
Book containing talking snakes, walking on water, turning water into wine, feeding five thousand on five loaves and two fishes! You expect us to take such a book seriously?
@MillionthUsernameАй бұрын
@@Shoomer1988 Because you believe you are a talking ape. And not only a talking ape, but a talking ape that "evolved" out of goo.
@Shoomer1988Ай бұрын
@@MillionthUsername You do get that humans coined the term 'ape'? Right? That means humans decided what the ape means. Humans decided that the word ape includes us. It's not complicated. Oh, and evolution does not say we evolved out of goo. But hey, if you want to believe the completely plausible idea that a magic space wizard made a man of clay and a woman out of one of his ribs then have at it.
@MillionthUsernameАй бұрын
@@Shoomer1988 "You do get that humans coined the term 'ape'? Right? That means humans decided what the ape means. Humans decided that the word ape includes us. It's not complicated." So you are not a talking ape? "Oh, and evolution does not say we evolved out of goo." I didn't say "evolution says" but that YOU believe that. Don't you believe that? The goo came before the cell in your belief, did it not? Use whatever word you like, but didn't the cell which eventually became the talking ape derive from the goo?
@Whatsisface4Ай бұрын
It's odd that the creator of the the universe would go to the trouble to fine tune the universe to allow physics/chemistry to allow life, but neglect our immediate environment which seems to want to destroy us. What with earthquakes, volcanoes floods, tsunami, predators, disease etc etc, being part of the universe, you can't say the universe is fine tuned for life. Not to mention that until modern times childbirth was very risky for both mother and child. Then, in astronomical terms we are about due a meteor that killed off the dinosaurs. Then, if a star goes nova in our vicinity it's all over, but I'll admit that one's unlikely. So no, I don't see the universe as being fine tuned for life.
@Being_Joe2 ай бұрын
God is not a genie, he is not here to grant our wishes.
@seanpierce93862 ай бұрын
Using God to explain a thing is granting our wish to explain the thing. God of the gaps is wishful thinking. Also, read Matthew 7:7-12.
@darrennew82112 ай бұрын
If god wants you to believe in him but refuses to provide any evidence at all that would convince you, then he's doing a really poor job.
@haitaelpastor9762 ай бұрын
Then why worship him?
@Being_Joe2 ай бұрын
@@haitaelpastor976 if not Him then what do you worship? Money, women, your job, your dog? We all worship something if you realize it or not. Me me me is a childish mindset. Don't stay a child. I was close to atheism but because of my life experience I am a strong believer. I don't know if I can really explain my reasons but I know now that this life would be much different if it was dictated by my inferior mind. Praise be to Lord Jesus Christ.
@theblackspark26442 ай бұрын
@darrennew8211 There is a lot of evidence. People are just too stubborn to see it.
@vonvonvonvonvonvonvonvonvo70092 ай бұрын
What converted me is actually the issue of Moral Subjectivism, the instant I realised that, without religion, our own human morality is subjective, I found that religion is the ONLY way to objectivify morality. If you don't see why Moral Subjectivity is bad, simply go and read up on Egoism and then make an actual argument that an Egoist would actually listen to and be unable to refute without the use of any Religion. Effectively speaking, what converted me was not the question of IF, but the question of WHY, what purpose does it serve us, and once I found that purpose, I embraced it like a frightened hound to their master.
@YSFmemories2 ай бұрын
This is the issue that sent me deep into depression and made life colorless. How can so many people defend evil and degeneracy and then claim that good people are bigoted or lack compassion? What would be the meaning of life if there isnt objective value and goodness? But wanting something to be true and it actually being true are two different things.
@lixiaoyu10672 ай бұрын
In fact what kept me from religion is the issue of Moral subjectivism... When I was younger, I always looking for objective morality, I was looking for that one ultimate view that tells me what is right and wrong, but I then realized that my morality was shaped by a lot of different things and beliefs, those things are all very subjective. Not only subjective, but also constantly changing throughout the years. The most recent experience is I realized how deeply my morality was shaped by patriotism. Never thought about it before, but somehow now I felt like my tax dollars became more important than people's life in some other countries. When I was younger, when I didn't need to pay tax, I never give it much of a thought. Life is life, and we cannot put a money value on life. I believed that. But it is extremely hard to act based on a general religion term such as 'all life are created equal'. If foreign life can be saved using my tax dollar, they are certainly not worth saving. It makes strong arguments if we are debating, but in real life and real money, it will not work.
@YSFmemories2 ай бұрын
@@lixiaoyu1067 你是中国人?
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
_"I found that religion is the ONLY way to objectivify morality."_ Really? How, exactly? I don't understand how a religion - or a god - would get you there. PS. If I understand you correctly, it's not that you found good evidence that a god was real, but just that the idea of subjective morality _scared_ you? Well, that's honest, at least. But it hardly seems to be a good reason to believe that something exists in reality. Then again, wishful-thinking is a powerful motivator, huh? Unfortunately, I care about the truth.
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
@@YSFmemories _"What would be the meaning of life if there isnt objective value and goodness?"_ You're right that wanting something to be true doesn't mean that it really _is_ true. Indeed, we should be even more cautious in that case. But why would you assume that there _is_ a "meaning of life." After all, "meaning" _is_ subjective. It depends on a thinking, feeling creature, and what has meaning to me might not have meaning to you. And "value" is _obviously_ subjective. Trade would be impossible if we didn't value goods in different amounts. We sell what we value less to buy what we value more. (And yes, we tend to value friends and family more than complete strangers.) However, I don't mean to dismiss your feelings of depression. Not at all. But please note that there might be a medical issue there. Just in case, be sure to discuss that with your doctor if you're still feeling that way. Life is too short to suffer unnecessarily. I wish you well!
@njhoepnerАй бұрын
It seems to me Trent dodged around Sinababu's argument rather than addressing it...then insists that our universe is better than his electron universe because it just must be, because it must be, because it seems that way to Trent. Subjective value judgment merely asserted without evidence. As for the Fine Tuning argument, while I agree it is the best argument available to theists, it is still a very weak argument. Here's a few reasons why: 1. It's not all that fine-tuned. I recommend the lecture "The Degree of Fine Tuning in our Universe - and Others" by Dr. Fred Adams (U of Michigan) in Oct 2020. These constants can be changed by a full order of magnitude - sometimes more - and still yield life-supporting conditions. 2. If god is all-powerful, then he/she/it can make life in any physical conditions...so fine-tuning is superfluous. 3. Given god is an immaterial being of pure mind and spirit, as christians claim, then NO physical conditions are necessary in the first place...fine tuning and the universe itself is a waste of effort. (As an aside, it seems obvious that a being of pure mind and spirit that wanted companions would naturally create immaterial beings like itself with whom it could actually commune - not talking apes who can't see, hear, or sense it and have to constantly struggle with their inability to commune with him/her/it). 4. Trent at least acknowledged that the universe is not really fine-tuned for us at all. We can only exist on one quintillion quintillion quintillionth of it - and even that tiny part constantly tries to kill and maim us, and succeeds most of the time. Whatever it's fine-tuned for, it ain't us. We've evolved and adjusted to it (tenuously and imperfectly, as one would expect from a purely natural process), not the other way around. 5. Most importantly, the fine tuning argument depends completely on arguing from probability, and we have no way of calculating or even estimating that probability. Those who say otherwise are relying on an subjective impression - "it sure seems unlikely to me" - nothing more. We don't know how it came about, and thus we don't know the range of possibilities...and therefore have no idea of the probability. And without being able to argue that it's some calculable level of improbable, the argument crumbles away to nothing.
@bevanbasson4289Ай бұрын
Well put, I see your fine tuning and raize you with the argument of evil
@njhoepnerАй бұрын
@@bevanbasson4289 That one too. It's not an issue for atheists, nor for polytheists, but for those who claim a single tri-omni deity, it is insurmountable.
@fhblake042 ай бұрын
Christ is King.
@chriscrilly8807Ай бұрын
King of the idiots who believe in him.
@extrage3061Ай бұрын
Nah.
@joeshabeАй бұрын
the Bible is fake: the exodus never happened; the gospels weren't written by the apostles; the Revelation is about Nero and not Satan. Jesus was just a charismatic sect leader, just like Muhammad. they weren't gods or divine.
@brucelansberg5485Ай бұрын
I thought Elvis was?
@GregoryUnger2 ай бұрын
The fine-tuning argument is nonsense. Who is to say the universe could have been different than it is? It may have been logically necessary for it to be that way. Even God can't make 25 not be a square number. And if it is necessary that the universe exists that way, then why is a God needed?
@theboombody2 ай бұрын
Maybe nothing at all is needed. It's a nihilistic viewpoint, but who can prove it wrong?
@redirectthepath2 ай бұрын
You have some idea of what God is capable of. Just because mere flesh and machine cannot solve a problem doesn't mean the creator can't.
@Sreerags59592 ай бұрын
@@redirectthepath Or he can't. You don't know for sure, do you?
@redirectthepath2 ай бұрын
@Sreerags5959 yeah you're right I don't really know. But being all powerful he should be able to solve things that are paradoxical.
@Sreerags59592 ай бұрын
@@redirectthepath I mean, there really is no way to know. If he is real, then the paradoxes are real, and as long as he exits, the paradoxes too, will exist. Can he, or can he not, change the status quo? Forget about whether he is capable of it or not, does he even KNOW if he can do it? In the end, only the questions remain.
@ArchibaldRoon11 күн бұрын
Side note: Winning 10 games of Poker in a row with all Royal Flushes is an excellent demonstration of how natural selection works. Everyone gets a random set of cards, but there is only one winner selected and that’s the one with a Royal Flush. Now repeat.
@thelongbow1412 ай бұрын
Here's another argument against fine-tuning that I rarely see: just because the physical constants appear to be incredibly precise does NOT necessarily imply that the *chances* of them being that way are equally small.
@nics49672 ай бұрын
They need not be equally small. Chance is an improbable theory for a precise state of affairs or even a moderately precise state. A shed is not as precise as a F-35. Chance is not a good explanation for a shed.
@Boundless_Border2 ай бұрын
@@nics4967 A snowflake is a "precise" state of affairs. Do you think there is a snowflake maker god?
@nics49672 ай бұрын
@Boundless_Border you seem to be bringing up a side matter as to what we can conclude from precision. The objection that x may just be precise not very precise is not a very good one to x not being caused by intelligence. By precise, you mean snowflakes are "held to low tolerance in manufacture" that would seem at least close to saying they are designed. If you are saying they are designed, I'm not the one saying there is intelligence behind their being you are.
@nics49672 ай бұрын
@@Boundless_Border all these 3 definitions of precise from Merriam-Webster seem to talk of intelligence. "1 : adapted for extremely accurate measurement or operation 2 : held to low tolerance in manufacture 3 : marked by precision of execution" Do you have a definition in mind that doesn't?
@nics49672 ай бұрын
@Boundless_Border is a snowflake of the same real moral significance as a human being?
@ji8044Ай бұрын
Why would an atheist fear anything supernatural? We're not the ones with the "loving God" who likes to condemn people to eternal torture.
@standard-user-nameАй бұрын
God's nature demands justice but His person desires mercy. You have free will. Align it with God or not. Your choices will be respected.
@extrage3061Ай бұрын
@@standard-user-name "Respected" our choice is literally either become a slave to god and his servant or be tortured for ALL ETERNITY. Nice fucking choice man. Not to mention, he allows slavery, genocide and rape. But yeah lets cover all that up :D
@austinjd2193Ай бұрын
@@standard-user-name You have free will, but you better use it exactly the way God wants you to or you are going to hell. Really sounds free huh?
@Bill_GarthrightАй бұрын
@@austinjd2193 Yeah, funny, isn't it? Of course, he has no good evidence any of that is true, anyway. It's just a completely unsupported claim. But even their _claims_ make no sense.
@fernandodeoliveiradasilva4991Ай бұрын
@@austinjd2193 You have free will, but you better use it exactly the way the law wants you to or you are going to jail. Really sounds free huh?
@timcrowe869616 күн бұрын
First off, we do not know what the probability is for the constants to be the values they are. We do not have enough information about how they came to be. Second that probability, no matter what it is, can be overcome with brute force, so if enough universes exist, it’s inevitable we would reach this outcome. We would have thought the same thing about it looking like design that earth is just the right temperature with just the right amount of water and mass if we could not look to the stars, but when we see the huge number of other planets that don’t fit that criteria it becomes clear it’s not designed. Third, the argument assumes the components of the universe that depend on these constants would not simple be replaced with other components emerging from different constants that could also be used to eventually get life from random interactions over time. This is not as interesting of a challenge as many think.
@rizdekd391213 күн бұрын
Further, IF universes emerge from an eternal natural existence, the process by which this emergence proceeds may only result in universes with fine tuned parameters. Maybe something about the process automatically ends up with these or similar parameters or the universe never materializes and another attempt occurs immediately. This would lead to essentially infinite numbers of 'universe attempts' easily overwhelming any odds against a fine tuned one like we seem to have. That's at least as good as imagining a super natural eternal creator produced this particular universe.
@randomusername27612 ай бұрын
You left out the even more shocking concession from Dawkins in that same episode of the Justin Brierly podcast. When Justin asked him why he still rejected the argument, he stumbled and said that he could be convinced to be a deist but Jesus Christ and at that stuff was nothing to do with it. He raised no objection to the argument other than something that the argument does not attempt to prove. And yet, during an interview with Cosmic Skeptic, he said that he thought there to be 'no good arguments'.
@Oneocna2 ай бұрын
He could be a pantheist
@michaelpryor782 ай бұрын
I believe Dawkins actually claims nowadays to be an agnostic who leans strongly towards atheism rather than an outright atheist.
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
@@michaelpryor78 Personally, I don't give a crap what Richard Dawkins thinks. After all, he's not the atheist pope or anything. Heh, heh. Heck, I was an atheist before I'd ever _heard_ of him. But I thought I'd point out that "agnostic" and "atheist" aren't contradictory. Indeed, I'd say they're complementary. I consider myself to be an "agnostic atheist." That's because I don't believe in a god or gods (atheist), but I don't claim to _know_ that all gods are simply imaginary (agnostic). And although I don't know - and don't care - I suspect that Dawkins would readily agree with that.
@newglof95582 ай бұрын
@@Bill_Garthrightfalse. Agnostic atheism is a nonsensical term that means nothing. People who use it fundamentally misunderstand the nature of belief, knowledge, and the relationship between the two. If you have justified true belief that God exists, you're a theist. If you have justified true belief that God does not exist, you are an atheist. If you do not have justified true belief, you are an agnostic.
@Bill_Garthright2 ай бұрын
@@newglof9558 _"If you have justified true belief that God exists, you're a theist."_ Heh, heh. So you're saying that there _are_ no theists? That's a bold claim. Or are you saying that you _do_ have "justified true belief that God exists"? That's also a bold claim. Either way, it's just a claim. Can you back it up with *anything* distinguishable from wishful-thinking? Oh, and I don't give a crap what you think about the labels I use to describe my position. If you don't like the labels, then ignore the labels and address the position I stated above: I don't believe in a god or gods, but I don't claim to _know_ that all gods are simply imaginary.
@call-to-christ2 ай бұрын
4:50 Haha, "do not put the Lord your God to the test" (Deuteronomy 6:16)
@jm3292 ай бұрын
Except for Gideon.
@Nemo124172 ай бұрын
@@jm329and Elijah.
@Tinesthia2 ай бұрын
@@Nemo12417 Elijah is my favorite example. I think most Christians know that their God would be just as silent as Ba’al during such a test and would call it evil to be treated like Ba’als prophets were.
@1970PhoenixАй бұрын
Another cafetaria Christian cherry-picking the verses that support his narrative while ignoring the ones that directly contradict it.
@MillionthUsernameАй бұрын
@@1970Phoenix What cherry-picking? What verses say that God is obliged to respond to dares, commands, tests from men?
@voxdea52692 ай бұрын
when the atheist was daring Trent to ask God to tell him the content of the letter, I remember when satan was tempting Jesus in the desert. asking Jesus to ask God to order his angels to save Jesus when he jumps off the top of temple. goosebumps.
@call-to-christ2 ай бұрын
Thought that as well! Deuteronomy 4:16, "Do not put the Lord your God to the test."
@Burt10382 ай бұрын
it's also disingenuous, because if Trent did indeed tell him the content of the letter, the atheist would simply accuse Trent of having foreknowledge of the dare and cheating.
@herroyung8572 ай бұрын
@@Burt1038 This is a baseless assumption of yours. If you assume the atheist was a good-faith actor and that he made sure no one could know the contents of the letter but himself, he would certainly lean more towards the theistic position if Trent told him precisely what was in the letter. I would lean more towards the theistic position if there were verifiable accounts of people with their heads severed walking around the next day like nothing happened, or if amputees regrew their limbs overnight, or if children around the globe just stopped getting bone cancer out of the blue.
@ryana17872 ай бұрын
Reminds me of 1 kings 18, where God has no problem being tested.
@RedRoosterRoman2 ай бұрын
It's true we cannot know for sure. BUT- there are hints in a person's attitude how good faith they are.... Often it is quite clear that they are biased against God (Not judging, I am bias for God 🤷♂️ but it is what it is) There are numerous other preternatural possibilities- And some that could not be disproven. Like Hinduism. Trent guessing right could be just a manifestation of brahmin as part of the cosmic drama 🤷♂️ Even the Pharisees had evidence of miracles. Fr some people; one miracle is enough. For others, some seemingly preternatural occurrence is enough. Others, as I suspect this atheist would become... Would simply keep requesting signs till it was no longer "faith" but "facts". But God demands faith. Faith is a special sort of love. @@herroyung857
@ZyroZoro2 ай бұрын
I'm an atheist. I also think the fine-tuning argument is the best argument for the existence of God. However, I still find problems with it, which I will list below. 1. How do we know it's even possible for the physical constants to be any different? It might be the case that these are the only values they can have. 2. If it is possible for the physical constants to be different, how do we know how different they can possibly be? Perhaps the universe as we know it wouldn't be possible if they were different by 1 part in 10^1000, but what if it's only possible for them to be different by 1 part in 10^100000? 3. Say it's possible for the constants to have a wide range of values (so that objection #2 isn't a problem). How do we know what the probability is for any of those values? Perhaps it's extraordinarily unlikely for them to take on values outside of what they currently are. Mathematically speaking, how do we know the probability distribution is flat instead of highly clustered around certain values? 4. Theists don't seem to like this objection, but what if there is a multiverse? Then we would just happen to be in one if the universes where it's possible to live. I don't see this as terribly unlikely. Throughout history our view of reality has continually expanded. We discovered more continents, then more planets, then more stars with their own solar systems, then more galaxies. And we didn't just discover more of them, but we discovered there are an unimaginable number of them. So I don't see why discovering that there are more universes would be preposterous. 5. Say it is possible for the physical constants to be wildly different. How do we know that those different values wouldn't give rise to a different kind of universe with different kinds of life? This is essentially Douglas Adams' puddle analogy. (You should look it up if you're not familiar, it's a neat analogy.) 6. What if it's possible for not only the physical constants to take on other values, but for there to be other physical constants themselves? If that's possible, there's no telling what would be possible given all the different interactions that these different physical constants would have. For example, it might have been possible to have another constant acting on the force of gravity instead of just the gravitational constant. It also might have been possible to not have had the force of gravity at all, and to have a different force with a different physical constant.
@Boundless_Border2 ай бұрын
I will add two notes that to your list. 1. The fact that if you vary several of the constants at once this will result in a different scope of values for life as we know it to exist while not being within the already established ranges. So it isn't quite that you have to roll X amount of 5s but you can roll a combination of 6s and 4s as well and end up with the same result. 2. As it is the form of the equations that gives rise to the constants. It doesn't make sense to manipulate the constants while holding the equations the constants arose from to be fixed. This is much like precisely calibrating an equation to match the data and someone coming along and saying "well if you change one of the coefficients the data won't align with the equation anymore."
@ZyroZoro2 ай бұрын
@@Boundless_Border Those are good points as well!
@therese64472 ай бұрын
Look up Father Mark Spitzer.....he has great arguments using science and mathematics that show the existence of God as the intelligent designer
@ВАЛЕРИНиколов-и9уАй бұрын
Probably is not the best argument.
@gladtrad2 ай бұрын
Anthropic reasoning, which is trivially true, explains the fine-tuning argument. I don't think it's a good argument in favor of God's existence.
@PossibleTango2 ай бұрын
This argument will not convince anyone that actually thinks about it. It's an argument from ignorance, can also be a false dilemma, and you could argue it invokes anthropic bias.
@gabrielm11802 ай бұрын
para ser justo, o ajuste fino não precisa envolver antropocentrismo; há versões do argumento dizendo que o próprio universo entraria em colapso se as constantes fossem um pouco diferentes.
@aasalata2 ай бұрын
It's quite literally the opposite of an argument for ignorance, there's no dilemma involved, and it's not even necessarily anthropic in nature because fine tuning is implied by any complex chemical structure, let alone sentient living being. You just actively don't want to be convinced.
@PossibleTango2 ай бұрын
@aasalata I would prefer there being an all loving God instead of nothing. Your attempt to refute me is weak and clouded by bias.
@aasalata2 ай бұрын
@@PossibleTango I'm arguing there's nothing to refute, though. As I said, claiming fine tuning is an argument from ignorance is just bizarre, considering the point of the argument is that we know there are many fine-tuned aspects that we can observe through science for which the best explanation is just design. The false-dilemma point is also puzzling given no dilemma is being presented at all, and as I said fine tuning being implied by the existance of any complex chemical structure makes the anthropic part of your point weird to the least as well. tldr you are just saying things.
@jofsky90662 ай бұрын
@@aasalata the anthropic part of OP's claim is wrong. However you are missing the false dilemma that is present: "The constanst are fine tuned, either by incredibly small odds, so small you can't even imagine how small they are or they were set by a designer." This is a false dilemma. 1. You can easily disregard the probabilistic part of the argument: -you can't appeal to small probability if you don't know what the probability is -just because the values are fine tuned it doesn't mean they could have been different -there is some evidence allowing for speculation that only one number has to have a set value and even then that number could be arbitrary and still permit everything to happen 2. God doesn't have to be the answer: -the constants could be a necessary part of the universe and reality without a need to change them -there are other valid proposals rather than God: mutliverse, a cyclical nature of the universe, necessary realms of mathematics or quantum fluctuations So the argument is set on a false premise (probability) and pushes one explanation as "better" with no justification
@Chicken_of_Bristol2 ай бұрын
I always find it interesting that the fine tuning argument is rarely the argument that theists bring up as being the argument they find most convincing, yet it's the one that atheists tend to say is the best argument for God's existence. Don't really know what to make of it, though.
@maciejpieczula6312 ай бұрын
Perhaps it is because athiests want physical proof, and this argument is the one that comes closest.
@maciejpieczula6312 ай бұрын
Perhaps it is because atheists want physical proof, and this is the argument that comes closest.
@TheAnimeAtheist2 ай бұрын
@@maciejpieczula631 It's because they respond to the most common arguments by theists, who by in large, don't really use this argument.
@Oneocna2 ай бұрын
Its a bad argument and theist know it. You cant believe in the fine tuning argument (teleological argument) and believe that there's suffering and evil in the world. Whatever explanation you come up with for god allowing evil (theodicy) is an argument from ignorance since god finely tuned all things in the universe include natural and human evil. Its like saying "I believe in a perfect watchmaker who made this perfect watch" and an atheist says "What about that chunk of metal in the metal that blocks the gears" and your response is "Oh I agree that that part is bad and can be better and the perfect watchmaker could and would make it better but since I don't know him i'm going to guess why that imperfect metal was placed there instead of assuming its part of the perfect design"
@imadmoussa19982 ай бұрын
@@Oneocna This makes no sense You're mixing up 2 arguments fine-tuning and intelligent design No one is arguing the universe is finetuned for life What people argue is the the constants of the universe is fine-tuned
@Mark-hp9bh2 ай бұрын
Sorry I haven't watched the whole video, so if this is already mentioned I apologise, but when athiests commonly say that life conforms to its environment, by their logic, life should be widespread everywhere, not just here on Earth. So if they are right, then why don't we see life out there, not just further out, but in our Solar system too?
@pjosip2 ай бұрын
That's exactly what scientists are doing and NASA and ESA sending probes to other planets and moons in hope of finding any form of life
@scottguitar81682 ай бұрын
I am an atheist but also agnostic, meaning while I don't yet have a path to form a belief that a god does exist, I don't know if any gods do exist. I also find the fine tuning argument to be one of the better arguments but the reason I find all of the arguments to be subpar is that they are based on our ignorance, not what we can actually know to have a better understanding. Something like aerodynamics is not based on our ignorance, there are testable principles that lead one to a better understanding and know of its existence. Even something like the God particle gave us reasons to suspect it was there before we actually discovered it. I simply don't find anything like that where there is an expectation to find a God that isn't tied to emotions or subpar reasoning. I realize this doesn't mean that no Gods exist but it seems like we only have superficial reasons so far for believing this.
@UnderWaterExploring2 ай бұрын
why specifically do you find the fine tuning argument one of the better ones?
@scottguitar81682 ай бұрын
@@UnderWaterExploring I think because the other arguments are easier to actually debunk with something. The fine tuning argument, while still based on our ignorance, doesn't really have a something to come back with due to our ignorance. We can certainly imagine natural causes for the constants, which is why I don't think atheists view this argument good enough to sway them.
@ElationInStellation2 ай бұрын
While I agree with you for the most part, I think, for me, the fact that the god of the gaps argument supplements the other arguments because we may not know things now but there are a lot of things we figured out that used to be exclusively in the divine realm.
@scottguitar81682 ай бұрын
@@ElationInStellation I am not completely sure what you mean about figuring things out that used to be exclusively in the divine realm? Do you mean like asserting Gods were responsible for lightning and thunder before we learned the natural causes or something else?
@ElationInStellation2 ай бұрын
@@scottguitar8168 Yes.
@awediomusic21372 ай бұрын
For me cosmic skeptic lost all credibility. I just finished watching a debate of his where he presented himself as an open minded “non resistant non believer”. I then watched a video of his on republicanism in the UK (being against monarchy) in which he deridingly said “a God that doesn’t exist”. Just bs. He’s trying to convert people, he’s not actually a genuine and honest enquirer who struggles with the notion of God.
@stickyrubb2 ай бұрын
I don't think he ever said he 'struggled'. He is a logical thinker who has concluded that for him, the evidence points towards no gods existing. Which is what all of reality points towards.
@newglof95582 ай бұрын
They never are.
@AnthoniePerez-v1e2 күн бұрын
Yeah, he puts up this fake “humble truth seeking” front.
@itsjustaryde18022 ай бұрын
I don’t see why this is especially compelling. You frame it in this manner “according to the-tuning argument the odds that the universe's laws of physics would be life permitting are almost zero” but not they’re not zero. An analogy often used is that the fine-tuning of life exists on a razor’s edge; but razors have edges and stuff can exist there. I’m not sure why when thinking about this the improbable should necessitate the supernatural. I don’t think I’m being I’m being willfully obtuse by withholding judgement about unexplained (maybe unexplainable) events. Why should the default be to attribute this fact to the miraculous instead leaving it open to a natural explanation? I, too look at existence with a sense of awe and wonderment at the fact that there is anything at all and especially at the fact of conscious experience. It seems to me that there are 4 possibilities for consciousness and material. 1) consciousness precedes material; 2) material precedes consciousness; 3) consciousness and material are somehow simultaneous; 4) consciousness and material are somehow synonymous. Of this group #2 material precedes consciousness seems to be the simplest even if it “Cries out for explanation. I know Aquinas has “ways” for why he thinks this fails but with all due respect to his brilliance and rock solid logic maybe there is more to the nature of nature than he understood then or that we understand now. Some fact about reality just is and William of Ockham leads me towards a naturalistic explanation. Paraphrasing him in a commonly excepted way he tells us, “entities are not to be multiplied beyond necessity”. This seems logical to me and generally a good starting point but I fully concede there are certainly abundant cases where the maxim fails. With that starting point it seems to me that material creating consciousness is simpler than consciousness creating material to eventually create consciousness again.
@darrennew82112 ай бұрын
The thing they never notice is they're not supporting the claim that the constants are improbable. Maybe they have the only values it's possible to have. What are all the possible values of Pi? What are all the possible values of the fine structure constant? Why do you think there could be more of the latter than the former?
@SacredReason2 ай бұрын
GLORY BE TO THE FATHER, TO THE SON, AND TO THE HOLY SPIRIT, ONE GOD ALMIGHTY. HALLELUJAH. AMEN.
@stickyrubb2 ай бұрын
ALL HAIL THE SPAGHETTI MONSTER, IT WILL BLESS US WITH ITS SAUCE. BOW DOWN TO THE FLYING ALLMIGHTY CREATOR. RAMEN.
@chriscrilly8807Ай бұрын
Glory be.....give us a break, Troll!
@Voxis_234562 ай бұрын
I think there are several problems with the fine tuning argument: 1. It assumes that the universes' constant values (such as gravity, the speed of light, protons being lighter than neutrons) have a dial that can be turned and aren't just inherent parts of the universe. 2. An argument can be made for a malevolent God, a God that tried to make the universe as hostile as possible to life that even if the universes values were changed, even a little bit, life would cease to exsist. 3. It assumes that if God exists, he couldn't create life in any other possible universe where these values are different. If God can create life in other possible universes than this argument that the universe is fine-tuned for life is null
@AgnosticThinkerАй бұрын
5:33 "Chance is improbable" thats literally a definition for chance, just because its improbable doesnt mean its improbable
@silverfire01Ай бұрын
I agree it can be chance when you look at the size of just the visible universe- about 94 billion light years wide and the number of planets and stars so could be very well be hit and miss when it comes to liveable planets and life being created. Thats even though we dont know how exactly life was kicked off which is yet to be discovered.
@njhoepnerАй бұрын
The main problem (among many) with "Fine Tuning" is that it relies on probability, and we don't have sufficient information to determine the probability of the constants being what they are. It could be one in a million, or one in ten trillion, or one...we don't know and can't know. And without that probability case, the fine tuning argument crumbles into nothing.
@AgnosticThinkerАй бұрын
@njhoepner and I think we have to think about what we define "life" as, there could be other non-carbon life out there
@njhoepnerАй бұрын
@@AgnosticThinker There is also that. According to christian claims, god is not life as we know it, therefore there is no reason to fine-tune for life as we know it, nor is there any reason to restrict our thinking to a universe that could support life as we know it. AND there's no reason to presume a priori that life as we know it is the only possibility.
@blankspace28912 ай бұрын
Trent have you heard about the psychophysical harmony argument?
@spencerd85042 ай бұрын
I would appreciate if anyone could simplify the psychophysical harmony argument in layman terms if possible?
@velkyn12 ай бұрын
it's dualism, the same baseless lies that christians use all of the time.
@Charmanber2 ай бұрын
The transcendental argument is the best argument, honestly.
@newglof95582 ай бұрын
It's powerful for people who are generally unfamiliar with philosophy. But I always found transcendental/presuppositionalism to be both philosophically and theologically problematic.
@bruno97642 ай бұрын
Why?
@Oneocna2 ай бұрын
it is really bad is god limited by logic or is god not limited by logic and therefore can create a rock he cant lift and limit himself
@RightCross222 ай бұрын
@@Oneocna well isn’t God making a rock too heavy for Him to lift the same as Him making a square with 3 sides or a bachelor who is married? It’s impossible in a very particular way.
@stephengray13442 ай бұрын
@@Oneocna God has created plenty of rocks that are so large that the concept of lifting them is incoherent (the moon being one obvious example of this).
@AlexanderNunn-g1r2 ай бұрын
Yeah, but if God is all powerful, then why would "fine tunings" as they're put be needed. I think at best they're "tuned" forget that fine stuff. Everything on this planet is trying to kill us constantly and everything off it, we'll it's taking that to the furthest extreme.
@undolf40972 ай бұрын
Why is Pascal’s wager F tier to the new atheists?
@Chicken_of_Bristol2 ай бұрын
If I had to guess, I'd say that at least part of the reason is that it doesn't really work unless you have some other independent reason to think that the Christian God exists. It isn't prima facie obvious that Christianity and Atheism are the only two live options and even ignoring weird hypothetical "gods" like the god that would prefer you not to worship him and would torture anyone who does for all eternity, there's examples like Islam which (at least according to some) are just as exclusive as Christianity. If picking the wrong god can give you hell anyway, then that changes the game theory of the different choices.
@undolf40972 ай бұрын
@@Chicken_of_Bristol Thank you! You would have to combine that wager with some compelling argument for another “god” anyway so I see how that makes the wager alone not a very useful argument
@Charlotte_Martel2 ай бұрын
@@Chicken_of_BristolThank you for presenting the issue of false dichotomy. There is also the issue of whether one can force himself to truly believe in something that he is not convinced of simply due to threats. Remember, for the Christian god, it's not enough to go through the motions. One must truly believe. The Wager ignores that problem.
@vicqruiz35372 ай бұрын
Because it implies that God can be conned by the simulation of belief.
@newglof95582 ай бұрын
@@Chicken_of_Bristolyou realize that Muslims and Christians (and Jews) orient their worship toward the same God, right ? My fellow Catholics don't like hearing this. You guys also understand worship in such a ridiculously narrow sense.
@chucklindenberg10932 ай бұрын
I am a nominal atheist at best and honestly modern atheists like Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennet and Sam Harris have completely turned me against the "neorelgious" atheism that is so very popular today. I am really far more agnostic than atheistic, but I don't ever pretend that my conception of a God being if that being were to exist would obey anyone let alone a believer in that being simply to prove to me that the being of God does in fact exist. This is pure narcisim and just immaturity being demonstrated on the debate stage 4:23. Also yeah I have to agree the fine tuning argument is probably the best argument for the existence of a creator god being.
@weltschmerzistofthaufig24402 ай бұрын
Seriously? If a god demands worship from you, why would it be narcissistic to ask for proof for its existence?
@herroyung8572 ай бұрын
Fine tuning is bunk. We can plug in different numbers into an equation, and most sets of these numbers yield a universe where life cannot exist. This is not evidence that any sets of constants (aside from the single one we observe) are remotely possible. We can only observe one set of constants. Why is it reasonable to assume that more than one set of constants can exist, when there's precisely zero evidence of this aside from our ability to plug numbers into an equation?
@chucklindenberg10932 ай бұрын
@@herroyung857 Sure when was the last time you created a universe?
@chucklindenberg10932 ай бұрын
@@weltschmerzistofthaufig2440 .It is frankly weird to me, that you actually think you should get to require or make any demands of a god, of God or of gods. If you believe you are equivalent to a god then honestly just say so....
@herroyung8572 ай бұрын
@@chucklindenberg1093 I'm not the one making any speculative claims on how our universe came to be, so it doesn't matter that I haven't created a universe. The point is that fine tuning is a terrible argument for god. For fine tuning to be of any support to deism, it must be based on rationalization of evidence. If there is no evidence of other constants, you cannot rationally conclude that our current set of constants is improbable. There is no evidence of other constants being possible, and there's only evidence of our current set of constants being possible. Therefore, fine tuning falls apart.
@andyfisher24032 ай бұрын
I love your content. I miss the longer episodes, rebuttals, dialogues, debates, etc.
@TheCounselofTrent2 ай бұрын
We are currently raising funds to host more in-person dialogues and debates. And hopefully we will do some more rebuttals soon.
@santiagogaliano10202 ай бұрын
intriguing ≠ convincing. argument ≠ evidence.
@Spoiler_Alertist2 ай бұрын
scientific theory ≠ fact
@santiagogaliano10202 ай бұрын
@@Spoiler_Alertist true. Scientific theory = the best model to explain observable reality. Like gravity
@Thrillzrobloxbedwars2 ай бұрын
Yes but arguments are the presentation of evidence conveyed in objection that can constitute as evidence if not disproved.
@santiagogaliano10202 ай бұрын
@@Thrillzrobloxbedwars well, no. there are a LOT of arguments in favor of the existence of Aliens, for example.. and they´re not evidence just because ther´re not disproved
@santiagogaliano10202 ай бұрын
@@Thrillzrobloxbedwars well, no. there are a lot of valid arguments in favor of the existence of Aliens, for example... and those are not evidence of the existence of aliens just because they are not disproved
@serpo97972 ай бұрын
Mister Horn, I am very thankful for your guidance. You have helped to answer so many of the questions I had on my journey towards joining the Catholic church. You are very well appreciated, Sir. Thank you
@chriscrilly8807Ай бұрын
Another mind lost to gobbledigook
@callacАй бұрын
There are actually several problems with the "fine-tuning" argument. First, we don't have other universes to compare the percentage of each element in this universe needed for life to exist. Second, most places in this universe would end our lives instantly, so saying that this universe has the "perfect conditions for life" seems to me to be at least ironic or sarcastic. And lastly, it would imply that this supposedly "omnipotent" god that you guys believe in needs very specific conditions to generate life. Which would diminish his omnipotence quite a bit.
@VakoreАй бұрын
5:48-6:50 addresses your second issue. I never really thought about the fine-tuning argument much so I can't really address the other points, though I fel lt like the second half of the video touched upon them. I'm probably going to look into this argument a bit more. Maybe you could too? Idk
@XDRONIN2 ай бұрын
1- At 12:56 That's Special Pleading What *exactly* makes "God" capable of maintaining the state of a mind without a physical body? 2- There is nothing that makes our Universe "Absurdly Rare" because of the Laws of Physics, there is nothing within the Laws of Physics that even suggests that our Universe should not exist 3- At 14:25 That analogy is absurd in itself because the Psychophysical Laws of our Universe are not independent parts of our Universe itself, so to fix that analogy you would need to present the white portion of the wall to be the same size, and shaped and occupying the same space as the fly, or the fly as the same size, and shape as the white portion of the wall, the white portion and the Fly are One and the Same, that is our Universe 4- At 16:23 Bad logic, that's a subjective value judgment without basis, a Universe with love-sick electrons would be indistinguishable in its value from a Universe like ours because the electron beings living in such a Universe would not see their existence as lesser to ours, also, giving the supposed number of God's interventions, miracles and appearances in our Universe, we don't live in a Universe with "Free Will", certainly; God has bent the course of human life according to his will, therefore; if the Abrahamic/Christian God is real, we don't have "Free Will"
@ben02982 ай бұрын
Fine tuning alone is an interesting and thought-provoking argument for God's existence. However, logical positions in isolation will probably not be enough to convince somebody to believe. A sceptic/truth seeker would need to experience some kind of supernatural experience/feeling of God's presence to fully accept him in my opinion.
@playerone3018Ай бұрын
The fine-tuning argument can be explained by so many other things than a personified god. Panpsychism would be a better follow-on belief to the fine-tuning argument. But, why belief at all? It is not necessary. Theists and non-theists alike can be mesmerized by the wonder of existence itself but resist the urge to create...from thought...in _our_ image...god(s). We have created gods in our image and then worship those thought-creations out of existential fear. We may have been born with everything we need to discover our nature yet we act like we must acquire knowledge in that which is already closer than our very skin. How can one turn to another or to a book or to a ritual or to some earthly knowledge seeking some idea of ultimate? Do you think what you are looking for is knowledge? Do you think what you are looking for can be given? Do you think what you are looking for can be explained with words from a charismatic tongue? Then why do you accept from others or the outside or some church or some organization that which can only be discovered...alone? When will you stop spiritually masturbating with belief?
@jayluss2 ай бұрын
I also didn’t find the fine tuning argument the most threatening as an atheist. The moral argument for sure. Of course we live in a universe that happens to have a planet that supports life because we couldn’t exist and wouldn’t be able to observe it otherwise.
@PercyTinglish2 ай бұрын
You find the moral argument threatening?
@JB-cd8eb2 ай бұрын
I agree, that's always my thought. The only way we could be talking is if the conditions were right for life, no matter how likely or unlikely that is. Morality on the other hand could almost singularly keep me convinced
@PercyTinglish2 ай бұрын
@@JB-cd8eb that seems to be misunderstanding the argument
@Truck_Kun_Driver2 ай бұрын
I think the simplest objection to the fine tuning argument is to simply steelman the opposite: Yes, we're the only lucky player who scored 10 wins in a row, with perfect cards. We're only here and wondering about it because we're the only ones who made it.
@BalthasarCarduelis2 ай бұрын
I think that the simplest objection is that of course the laws of this or that constant sit within this or that finely tuned band of values because if the values were different then the constants would simply be different. Of course the water is vase shaped, if it was in a toilet then it would be toilet shaped.
@stephengray13442 ай бұрын
The "we're only here and wondering about it because we're the only ones who made it" response isn't actually very simple because it assumes the existence of a massive number of universes all with slightly different physical laws. And we have absolutely no evidence at all for the existence of even one other universe, let alone the large number it would need to bring the probability of one of them being life-permitting up high enough that it isn't surprising.
@EricThomas19962 ай бұрын
All you have to do to dismantle that steel man is to question whether "infinite universe" theory is even plausible. "Of course we can wonder about it since we're in the right universe" requires infinite universes to be a legitimate reality. There is no evidential proof that infinity exists beyond human numerical concepts. There are some very strong minds that will tell you that infinity in the real world is like a "square circle" - it doesn't exist. For example, supposedly you can cut a piece of paper into infinite pieces if you have an infinitely small knife. This only exists in theoretical mathematics where you can divide integers. In reality, the piece of paper has finite mass and volume that cannot be divided infinitely. So this "we're just lucky to be in the right universe" falls apart once you show that there is no evidence at all that other universes exist anyways, and no logical way to deduce they exist either.
@gregory74062 ай бұрын
The problem is that its not 10 wins in a row, its millions upon millions in a row. That’s mathematically impossible
@redbepis46002 ай бұрын
A simple example of survivorship bias. Wonderfully put
@dogsandyoga174316 күн бұрын
Alex O'Connor has a great response to the fine-tuning argument. You might need to change that thumbnail😂
@SmartDumbNerdyCool13 күн бұрын
Alex overrated man. His skull doesn't even have the morphology of a super smart person. It's rather small you could say.
@JohnHenrysaysHi2 ай бұрын
You are in my KZbin Mount Rushmore of All Time Favorites! Prayed for you and your family and everyone here in my Rosary this morning. Hope you and yours have a light-filled peaceful joyful blessed week, Trent!
@chriscrilly8807Ай бұрын
Saccharin silly religious mumbo jumbo. Prayer (and a bus ticket) will get you downtown.
@JohnHenrysaysHiАй бұрын
@@chriscrilly8807 Thanks for sharing your philosophy compared to mine, Chris!
Ай бұрын
There is no “fine tuning” and you have no argument….
@PatricksBreastplateАй бұрын
It’s not even required. If you look out of the window and don’t infer God, you are a lunatic.
@thetheatreguy98532 ай бұрын
I struggle to see how we can make any claims about the probability or likelihood of our universe existing in this particular way when we have literally no idea what sort of external constraints (if any) govern what causes a universe to come into being. It is possible, perhaps, that the universe could have only existed in this particular way, but once again, since we have no data, all we can really do is speculate how likely a universe like this is.
@blusheep22 ай бұрын
This is something to ask the physicists. In short, I believe it comes down to the way they work their calculations. To get a universe does not require the constants to be arranged a certain way. Universes can exist regardless of the values. As far as they can tell, there are no constraints.
@ConservativeMirror2 ай бұрын
It took ~9 billion years for life to appear on this planet, and ~13 billion years for humans to appear. This universe was not designed for life. But even if you think it was, you have to show that you are right. There could be other explanations.
@jhoughjr12 ай бұрын
Well it sures seems not designed for non life.
@dilamotamire68702 ай бұрын
As an atheist, I think of fine-tuning argument as arguing "if my green plant wasn't green, it wouldn't be green."
@stickyrubb2 ай бұрын
Exactly. It is like the puddle argument. A puddle that thinks that the hole it's in was made perfectly for him is like a theist thinking the universe was made for them to live in. When it obviously is the other way around, we evolved to live in our environment. If our environment was different, we would have evolved differently, or we wouldn't be here at all to ponder these questions.
@pmg5672 ай бұрын
@@stickyrubb in other words the survivor ship bias
@stickyrubb2 ай бұрын
@@pmg567 Yes!
@AJCavalier2 ай бұрын
@@stickyrubbAlthough I don’t disagree with your argument, you’re completely missing the point of the fine tuning argument. The fine tuning argument proposes that the chances that we live in a universe that permits the existence of life is so low, that God is a more likely explanation. Your argument that ‘we evolved to live in this universe’ doesn’t really work here because you have to accept the pretence that life will 100% come about. What if we didn’t evolve to live in this universe, that is to say, what if life didn’t happen at all (it’s not like it has to or that the universe must in some way allow it) and yet we are here. I think that’s more so the argument that the video is getting at.
@pedro_61202 ай бұрын
@@AJCavalier the problem with the argument is that it says that the odds of having habitable zones are incredibly low but it doesn't take into consideration that the universe is absolutely masive. It's kinda like saying 1% is a small percentage, but when you roll 100 times, the odds of landing that 1% are very high. Also, life adapts to its environment, so having the "perfect requirements" is not evidence for this since life adapts to what it has acces to so the "perfect requirements" aren't the same for everyone.
@Reignor992 ай бұрын
Thankyou for stating its the "fine-tuning argument" in the first 15 seconds. For this you have gained a like and comment from a non-believer.
@greengandalf91162 ай бұрын
There are lots of problems with the fine-tuning argument, but the simplest is this: the physical constants could be necessary for the existence of any universe.
@franciscosilvestre69142 ай бұрын
This is not addressing the argument, however. No matter how many universes there may be, you would still need God for it to have any uniformity. Otherwise, you would be arguing for a chance, self sufficient universe, where chaos and disorder were the main forces, that was created X billion of years ago yet ( *for some odd reason* ) favored us out of all the species in it. Not to mention the simple matter of how lucky you would have to be for chaos and disorder to be the author to order and uniformity.
@greengandalf91162 ай бұрын
@@franciscosilvestre6914 your comment is irrelevant to both the fine-tuning argument and my comment. The physical constants being necessary means they *could not* be anything else than what they currently are. There is no tuning possible in this world.
@kze242 ай бұрын
@@greengandalf9116There is no scientific evidence to suggest that the physical constants couldn't be different than what they are.
@greengandalf91162 ай бұрын
@@kze24 there is also no scientific evidence to suggest they could be different. It's a question that is entirely up in the air.
@tgstudio852 ай бұрын
@@franciscosilvestre6914 Oh so please do tell me, how do you know, that physical constants could be any different then they are? How do you compare that? Compare them to what exactly?
@charlesdarwin180Ай бұрын
Whatever the improbability of having something supernatural exist is way more improbable than life on earth's improbability.
@1970PhoenixАй бұрын
I look forward to seeing your calculations justifying these relative probabilities.
@charlesdarwin180Ай бұрын
@@1970Phoenix No calculations necessary. There isn't a single event that has affimative evidence to have supernatural origin.
@1970PhoenixАй бұрын
@@charlesdarwin180 I misread your comment - I agree with you.
@edwardvan5808Ай бұрын
Take a look at the occult. It's for real.
@AwaifnАй бұрын
What exactly makes the idea of the supernatural so unbelievable?
@UserName-nc6vw2 ай бұрын
But how does this relate to Yahweh, who created everything in 6 days and who instructed the Jews to bury their excrement, apparently fearing to step in it when walking through their camp? This is more of an argument in favor of the existence of a god about whom nothing is really known.
@klausroxin44372 ай бұрын
It does not relate to Yahweh at all. Like all arguments for god, it could at best prove the existence of *a* god, but not of any specific god.
@LtDeadeye2 ай бұрын
One objection that’s new ‘to me’ is this: If the universe is defined as all space time and matter and the universe is finely tuned then we’ve never seen anything that hasn’t been finely tuned. So we’ve no standard against which to judge whether or not anything at all is finely tuned or not.
@BerishaFatian2 ай бұрын
We don't need a standard, through science we see that life in the universe wouldn't exist if the universr weren't fine tuned.
@LtDeadeye2 ай бұрын
@@BerishaFatian But to categorize something as finely tuned begs the question if we cannot know what fine tuned even is. And how can we know what it is if we have no standard by which to judge?
@tomasbarsvary9382 ай бұрын
Exactly. Don’t find the argument convincing at all and I’m a devout Catholic.
@ikengaspirit30632 ай бұрын
@@LtDeadeye okay, but that argued assumes we have to see anything in the first place, the universe could have just been dead. Ur implicitly assuming pan-psychism.
@catcans2 ай бұрын
@@LtDeadeyelook at the "Goldilocks" situation our planet is in. Look at the insane "coincidence" that allows full eclipses to exist. How water behaves vs how it should chemically. Look at highly constructed scientific processes like the Krebs Cycle that are perfectly balanced.
@LailokenScathach2 ай бұрын
Reverse engineering anything makes it look incredible. The odds of that ball bouncing several times and landing in that exact spot is 10 million to 1.
@standard-user-nameАй бұрын
The odds for the universe not just existing but being able to support life are much smaller than that.