Prospero
Thinker
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2003
- Messages
- 176
Dylab said:What if scientists discovered that the simplest laws of our universe rely on a certain number of variables. They somehow find out that these variables are not dependent on anything and that if they were barely changed then our universe could not produce life. These scientists were also, some how, able to prove that the universe as we know it is the only universe that exists.
At what point, if any, would we say that the universe would be too improbable for a god to not exist?
Furthemore how much would saying the universe would have a final cause automaticaly imply the existance of a god?
To begin with, don't bother with the argument which contains pieces such as "if gravity were .00001 times stronger or weaker, the universe couldn't support life" etc. That's using statistics in a setting where infinite is one of the factors, therefore even one over infinite of infinite still equals infinite. Our "known" universe exists within one Hubble Sphere (the volume of space measured by how distant light has traveled since the Big Bang to be detected by the Hubble Telescope). What's more, there are even more Hubble Spheres bordering ours and, presumably, continue on ad infinitum. With an infinite universe as densely populated with mass as ours, there must be infinite planets exactly like earth with everyone exactly like everyone here with the exact same history and process of development just by simple statistical calculations using infinity.
Our universe couldn't exist in any other way than the way it does, thus the argument that it exists the way it does because there was a creator is pointless. It could only exist this way. If there was a Creator, it would have to be this way. If there wasn't a Creator, it would have to be this way.
As for the point at which it would be too improbably that a god not exist, well, if there happens to be a Rapture in the near future, then I'll be inclined to think otherwise.