That's the key question, isn't it? Why would time increase ordered complexity? Shouldn't it be the opposite?BrazosDog02 said:
4 billion years in the making, it better be fancy.
Jabin said:That's the key question, isn't it? Why would time increase ordered complexity? Shouldn't it be the opposite?BrazosDog02 said:
4 billion years in the making, it better be fancy.
Makes me assured there is a Creator. And a good one at that.GasPasser97 said:
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2024/05/15/world/human-brain-map-harvard-google-scn
Jabin said:That's the key question, isn't it? Why would time increase ordered complexity? Shouldn't it be the opposite?BrazosDog02 said:
4 billion years in the making, it better be fancy.
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Here is an analogy that I think could apply.
I am an electrical engineer and the work I do is in designing / renovating buildings. Ground up construction, a lot of times, is easy. But renovations can be a little tricky. Imagine a 60 year old building that was built for one tenant. And over the years, tenants move out or new tenants move in, and each time you have to redesign part of the building that is already there to fit the new needs. And after 60 years and a dozen tenants worth of this process you are left with a building that has been patched and tweaked, that is full of vestiges of old design elements, and full of inefficiencies. Each time you renovate, you ask yourself "what is the best / least expensive way to get to the new tenant's requirements from the current existing conditions. And inevitably, that answer is basically always different from how you would design toward the tenant's requirements in a ground up project.
How do we know what the never pathways were for our far distant ancestors? Do we have any specific examples of such pathways? And, if such exist, how do we know with certainty that they were our ancestors?Quote:
The analogy isn't perfect since human engineering design is intentional whereas genetic variation is not. But, I think it demonstrates how vestiges and complexities of the 'previous version' can get carried through.
The laryngeal nerve is a classic example of this as well. It is a nerve in the neck connecting two points, but takes a u-turn inefficient pathway to connect those two points. In our far distant ancestors, the nerve takes a straight shot. But, as we evolved and changed shape, the path became less straight. Because evolution involves minor changes, with each generation, it became 'easier' to have an inefficient path for the nerve than to fully redesign the pathway. The example is best demonstrated in giraffes where you have this nerve that needs to only travel a short distance between points, but is instead about 5 meters long to run down the neck and back up. Evolution does not get to tear up an old design and start over. It has to constantly build upon what is already there.
Jabin said:Quote:
Here is an analogy that I think could apply.
I am an electrical engineer and the work I do is in designing / renovating buildings. Ground up construction, a lot of times, is easy. But renovations can be a little tricky. Imagine a 60 year old building that was built for one tenant. And over the years, tenants move out or new tenants move in, and each time you have to redesign part of the building that is already there to fit the new needs. And after 60 years and a dozen tenants worth of this process you are left with a building that has been patched and tweaked, that is full of vestiges of old design elements, and full of inefficiencies. Each time you renovate, you ask yourself "what is the best / least expensive way to get to the new tenant's requirements from the current existing conditions. And inevitably, that answer is basically always different from how you would design toward the tenant's requirements in a ground up project.
I'll allow you to retract that analogy. It's one that an intelligent design scientist would use all day and every day. Who was the engineer of the brain and/or the universe (since this thread explicitly compares the two)? Again, random chance does not lead to increasing complexity. Outside of evolutionary theory, there are no examples, and especially not of an unbroken chain of increasing complexity over billions of years.
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How do we know what the never pathways were for our far distant ancestors? Do we have any specific examples of such pathways? And, if such exist, how do we know with certainty that they were our ancestors?
What process ensured that those random changes resulted in benefits to the organism? Can you provide examples of anything outside of evolution where random changes resulted in beneficial changes?
What evidence would you consider relevant to the question whether the changes were due to outside engineering vs. random chance? What evidence would you consider persuasive to refuting the hypothesis of an outside engineer?
I've made this point several times before. Randomness is a high level philosophical construct that is absolutely incompatible with nearly any religious worldviewQuote:
Regarding 'random chance': Does your worldview allow for such a concept to even exist? If God is the architect and creator of everything, what room is left for randomness?
ramblin_ag02 said:I've made this point several times before. Randomness is a high level philosophical construct that is absolutely incompatible with nearly any religious worldviewQuote:
Regarding 'random chance': Does your worldview allow for such a concept to even exist? If God is the architect and creator of everything, what room is left for randomness?
Jabin said:
That's an interesting question and one on which I'm not familiar with the writings of Christian thinkers. The baseline, from a Christian perspective, is that God is in control of everything. However, does he in his infinite wisdom and power allow randomness at all in his creation?
I don't know the answer to that but I suspect that the answer is yes. Wouldn't free will, for example, be an example of randomness?
I suspect (note my hesitant and equivocal language) that God, while in control of every subatomic particle, does permit randomness except when he doesn't.
Other's thoughts?
Good post, by the way.Quote:
I think by defnition there is no way to conceptualize a mechanism for things to occur in haphazard ways, so the disorder necessary for that to exist must be the foundation for any such thought
Not exactly. I mostly have two points. First, randomness/disorder is foundational. It can't arise out of any system of laws or logical mechanisms. Second, randomness/disorder is completely contradictory to religion, as religious worldviews all explain why the world is the way it is and give meaning to existence and events.Jabin said:
So working your point backwards, are you suggesting that the appearance of order in the universe implies some intelligence that provided that order?
If the universe were truly random, we would have no natural laws, nothing would be predictable, etc.?
But can order and randomness coexist in a single, closed system?ramblin_ag02 said:Not exactly. I mostly have two points. First, randomness/disorder is foundational. It can't arise out of any system of laws or logical mechanisms. Second, randomness/disorder is completely contradictory to religion, as religious worldviews all explain why the world is the way it is and give meaning to existence and events.Jabin said:
So working your point backwards, are you suggesting that the appearance of order in the universe implies some intelligence that provided that order?
If the universe were truly random, we would have no natural laws, nothing would be predictable, etc.?
I'm not trying to make an argument against randomness and fundamental disorder. It might be possible for order or the semblance of order to arise out of randomness. There are also worldviews compatible with randomness such as existentialism. Meaninglessness as a worldview is compatible with randomness as a fundamental force of existence.
Very good question, and I have no ideaJabin said:But can order and randomness coexist in a single, closed system?ramblin_ag02 said:Not exactly. I mostly have two points. First, randomness/disorder is foundational. It can't arise out of any system of laws or logical mechanisms. Second, randomness/disorder is completely contradictory to religion, as religious worldviews all explain why the world is the way it is and give meaning to existence and events.Jabin said:
So working your point backwards, are you suggesting that the appearance of order in the universe implies some intelligence that provided that order?
If the universe were truly random, we would have no natural laws, nothing would be predictable, etc.?
I'm not trying to make an argument against randomness and fundamental disorder. It might be possible for order or the semblance of order to arise out of randomness. There are also worldviews compatible with randomness such as existentialism. Meaninglessness as a worldview is compatible with randomness as a fundamental force of existence.
You're probably right about the colloquial use of "randomness".Jabin said:
I suspect that they cannot, but completely lack the tools to prove or disprove my suspicion. In fact, I don't even know which tools to use!
ETA: What most people mean by "randomness" seems to be "unpredictable", and especially "unpredictable" to them.
The idea that radioactive decay (and other quantum processes) are predictable and deterministic with the right information is the hidden variable hypothesis of quantum mechanics. To my best knowledge it has been thoroughly discredited. It seems in the quantum realm that probability and uncertainty are physical facts, and not just appearances due to lack of information. How that jives with the idea of God is beyond me, other than to say that God doesn't have to follow physical laws.Quote:
Consider something like radioactive decay. General understanding of the process is that behavior of individual atoms is inherently random. But overall samples of decaying material behavior in predictable and ordered ways. Might it be that we describe behavior of individual atoms as random due to a lack of further or deeper scientific understanding? I don't know.
I don't think there is a good answer to this question. We would need to know how God's mind works, what are His priorities, and how does He value those priorities in relation to each other. At least in Christianity, God is unknowable. I think it can be useful the other way around, though. Based on what we can learn about our universe, we know God isn't the shiny, happy, unicorns. rainbows, and gumdrops type of God. As you said, too much death and violence for that to be the case. I think that is only useful in one direction though. Trying to prove God through the physical world just doesn't work, but trying to know God through the physical world probably has some value. Or to put it more in your worldview, the physical world can be used to narrow down the possible options for the character of God, if God exists.Quote:
If God guided evolution is the claim, what are the observations we should expect to see that back that up? And what observations would refute the claim?
kurt vonnegut said:Jabin said:
As incredible as the human body is, I do not see it as a designed thing. And if it is designed, why did God give us things we don't need? And why did God give us genetic mutations that result in birth defects. The idea that we are created by an outside engineer suggests that babies dying of Trisomy or congenital disorders is an intended feature rather than a bug.
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And if it is designed, why did God give us things we don't need?
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And why did God give us genetic mutations that result in birth defects. The idea that we are created by an outside engineer suggests that babies dying of Trisomy or congenital disorders is an intended feature rather than a bug.
I'm pretty much with you all the way here. The way I think about it, God is omniscient because He is omnipotent. Things happen because He Wills them to happen. So when other entities such as humans have free will, then His knowledge becomes limited. God can choose not to choose, and instead let a human make a choice. When that happens, He limits His own power and therefore limits His knowledge. I'd be happy to be wrong, but I honestly can't think of a way to generate randomness. Any kind of mechanism we can imagine involves some sort of order, and how can total disorder arise from any ordered process?Quote:
I was going to point out quantum physics and hidden variables in response to your previous post. I think you are essentially correct in pointing out a fundamental incompatibility of randomness with a truly omnipotent and omniscient god. It's such a conflict that even the idea of allowing free will is extremely difficult (if not outright impossible see other threads) to logically justify a mechanism for that maintains knowledge of the future. Chaos is easy, it's really just a matter of relative complexity. But true randomness is a tricker thing than free will. In fact a will is just a localized determinism semi-divorced from other determinism. In such a sense it seems you could argue that god is "handing over authority" assuming he's capable of doing so.
Quantum physics is weird, but I don't think it's a lack of God's omniscience to say that God doesn't know the position and velocity of a quantum particle. A quantum particle physically doesn't have a velocity and position at the same time. It's like saying that God isn't omniscient because He doesn't know what language the color blue smells like. It's an equally nonsensical question to ask for both qualities of a quantum particle. I would say that God knows how a quantum waveform will collapse, even though that seems random to us. Pretty much like I said above. God forces it to collapse into a certain state, so of course He knows the resultQuote:
For the quantum my understanding is that you could be Laplace's demon, and know literally everything it is possible to know about the system with some limits due to the uncertainty principle and you still will be unable to predict the outcome. But the uncertainty principle itself is just a way of saying laplace's demon can't know "everything" (as opposed to everything that can be known).
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House construction:
Conclusion: Designed
Human Body:
Conclusion: Not designed. A product of time, chaos, chance?
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If we cannot determine the reason, that doesn't mean an answer doesn't exist in the eyes of the designer. That answer may be something that remains a mystery depending on the information available.
Example:
If I see a building from the 1700 hundreds, I may not be able to explain why a feature exists that the builder. It could have been for a purpose, it could have been simply for his pleasure.
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Assuming there's no information about God or questions answered as to why things are they way they are, then this conclusion is reasonable. However the best explanation for who God is, how He's interacted in human history, and why things are they way they are have been answered to some degree.
Perfect creation without defect. - Genesis
Creation is cursed - defects are the result of the curse, not the original design. Genesis 3
Creation groans due to the defect - we see this in suffering - Romans
God has promised a future free of the curse - Revelation - no more defects
God demonstrated He has the ability to remove the defects: Jesus miracles in the gospels.
Can you provide more on this assertion?Quote:
Whales have leg bones?
A quick google search will show that whales and dolphins have these bones.Jabin said:Can you provide more on this assertion?Quote:
Whales have leg bones?
I did that search, quickly. It seems that the primary "leg" bones are actually pelvic bones which are not vestigial but are used in birthing. There are a couple/few tiny bones as well that may be vestigial or, like many other supposedly vestigial items, have a use of which we are not yet aware. I was wondering if I missed something because those two examples don't really seem to support much at all. I also did not spend a whole lot of time researching the issue.kurt vonnegut said:A quick google search will show that whales and dolphins have these bones.Jabin said:Can you provide more on this assertion?Quote:
Whales have leg bones?