
It was something about the real question being whether or not we believe that the universe is founded solely on cause and effect.
--A
Moderator: Fist and Faith
I'd like to ask though, why does there need to be a reason? A reason suggests, as I've said before, a plan, and a plan implies a planner.Avatar wrote:I'm happy with the thought that we are infinitely unlikely.
Please, go back and tack on an 'as we know it' there. We're defining things by our own frame of reference again when we make statements like that. Who's to say that life couldn't have evolved in a universe with different rules to ours? It would be entirely different to ours in just about every way, so, of course, the conditions necessary for life to arise would also be different.ALL the cosmological constants (force of gravity, fine structure constant, nuclear force, and so on) have EXACTLY the right values which would allow life to exist. Had any of them been even just slightly different (and by "slight" I mean a change on the order of magnitude of about plus or minus 0.0000001), the Universe would be completely different, and without life.