In arguing against naturalistic accounts of how the world got to be as it is, some religious folk advance the argument that it’s inconceivably improbable that the earth could have come into existence more or less randomly, given how well-suited it seems to be for the life that thrives upon it. For example, it’s often pointed out that the earth is just the right distance from the sun to get sufficient light without getting too much heat for the life that thrives here. On the surface, this seems a compelling argument in favor of an intelligent designer.
But in fact this is a backwards approach. It’s not that the earth was especially formulated to accommodate the physical makeup of human beings and the other extant organisms. Rather, it seems reasonable to suggest that the planet emerged as it did and that whatever organisms could survive under its conditions survived. Organisms that require extremely high or low temperatures or greater or lesser light than our sun provides simply died out. For those of us left, it may seem as if the earth was especially formulated to our needs. And while that is perhaps a plausible assumption, it certainly isn’t a necessary assumption, and it doesn’t on its own make a very good case for the existence of any intelligent designer.
A thought experiment may be useful here. Consider a basketball tournament. Let’s assume that all games are played on the same court. Initially, there are many contenders for a championship title. As playoffs progress, less able teams are pared off the bracket. Finally, you get down to two teams, and one of them prevails. Now one could suggest that the basketball court was created in such a way that it was ideal for the team that ultimately won. That is, it was created in such a way that its court and rims and backboards provided just the right bounces for the winning team, that its acoustics were just right, so that cheering in favor of the winning team bolstered the team, while jeers went essentially unheard. In this case, one must surely credit the builder of the basketball arena for the team’s victory. But this is backwards. It was of course the team’s collective skill that led to its ultimate victory.
Similarly, in the matter of the fitness of the earth for its inhabitants, one must conclude that the inhabitants of the earth are those who were suited to inhabit it and not that the earth was suited to its ihabitants.
My view is that with all the number of solar systems and planets in them, it would be hard not to get one planet that is suited for life in all the millions of planets and suns there are.
You can call it god or you can call it chance statistics…
Very interesting and impressive ideas. However, I can’t help but feel that when you say these people are looking at the situation “backwards”… well, it most certainly is the chicken and the egg. There IS no backwards! Or, if you’d like, both perspectives are “backwards”. We are the ones who were able to live in this environment AND we are the ones that this environment “picked” to survive. Both perspectives are true and, essentially, the same. In one case you are calling it God, in another you are calling it chance. This is, in effect, the chicken and the egg. It would be improper to say one comes before the other or one is more important.
Cheers, Devin
Always glad to read a daryl post on religion!
Just yesterday I was involved (on the side line really) in a conversation with a jewish woman and a chrstian man talking about valentines day. It seems the jewish woman doesn’t celebrate the day because it’s been skewed from it’s pagan start by the cathloic church. The christian man argued the start didn’t matter, it what the day means to people now – and even went so far as to say it doesn’t matter Dec 25 is not the day Jesus was born, it was is day set aside to remember and thank him. (Have to give him some credit there). She continued on though, that you can’t ignore the history – at this point I brought some some jewish history, lights and golems and stuff, as an example of her religous days. She then claimed that is not what those days mean to jewish people, so it wasn’t the same. Interesting once someone has a belief in place what they will go to to back it up instead of questioning the belief with the new information (one of the first tenents of the Kabbalah no less).
With respect us on earth… if you accept that the universe is inifinte, then all things possible, no matter how probable, exist. Re: money, typewritter, shakespear.