Markovich wrote on 08/03/10 at 01:53:03:
MNb wrote on 08/02/10 at 23:25:08:
Markovich wrote on 08/02/10 at 15:59:38:
...each is more consistent with the facts, as I understand them, than the other.....
It's here that Kierkegaard objects. For him faith has value
despite the facts. Exactly here the element of subjectivity creeps in.
Kirkegaard can disagree all he likes, and I will say that faith inconsistent with the facts is so much wishful thinking. I see no essential difference between Kirkegaard's faith and that of Descartes or Berkeley; the first imagining that only God could guarantee that reality wasn't an illusion; the second who thought that the entire sensory field was God's direct, miraculous creation, and reality a divine sham.
These people grew up in a world that equated good and God, and they all three, along with many others, clung to that idea.
So much is imposed by culture, but culture has changed, freeing some of us to think thoughts formerly impermissible.
"Facts" change; true faith, not to a given religion, but to a higher power is immutable. Thus to suggest that intelligent design should be taught as a substitute for evolution is wrong. Evolution is the greatest predictive tool of any of the sciences and is the hardest of all hard sciences; reject it, and you reject science.
Physicists' "facts" are in a state of flux and the present thinking is that the incredible "coincidence" of the universe is unimaginably improbable; it is consistent with intelligent design to account for it thereby making evolution the "tool" of a higher power and "intelligent design" the cause of evolution.
What would the atheists have us do? Preach the gospel of "chance"? Would it be acceptable to teach the unimaginable level of fine tuning to get this universe and allow physicists to have the final say that it is just one of an "infinite" number of universes that do not support life? Or would it be permissible to teach that the extraordinary set of circumstances that led to our universe are also compatible with intelligent design?
Why is a universe coming into existence by chance acceptable, but a universe coming into existence by intelligent design unacceptable? Should these two possibilites get equal coverage?
Both have merit and should be given equal billing.
God is neither omnipotent nor omniscient. As for omnipotent; if God could have prevented the holocaust, it/he/she would have done so. God would never commit an Evil act or even give the appearance of an Evil act.
In the Old Testament, God said it was the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end; it did not say it was the middle.
This is the middle; we are on a long majestic pathway to eternity. If we are walking on a circular path, then the arrow of time is going forward and backward but not with our concept of "time".
Think of time as observable change. According to my definition, in a universe lacking life, time does not exist hence that universe cannot exist.
In this scenario, think of the "Big Bang" as a large sparkler retreating away from us and consuming alll the universes that do not support life and bringing them into existence.
As we go down this circular path, it appears to be a straight line; thus the arrow of time seems straight. In actuality I theorize a "wall" of time, one that is 3 dimensional, the past, present and future. That occurs in heaven.
As for omniscient there is no better discipline than chess to demonstrate God's lack of omniscience. If we eliminate the 50 move rule, the median length of any game would be about 1 trillion moves. That is, let us call every conceivable legal combination of pieces and pawns and every move as "permissible"
One such position would be eight pawns on the fourth and eight pawns on the fifth (Sloughter chess as opposed to Fischer Random chess!). Those of you bored with positional chess might want to give it a try.
Another legal position would be with Kings on opposite sides of the board and 31 pawns to each side, or a board with 1 King apiece, 8 pawns and 27 Bishops to a side. Now, simply create every single combination of pieces and pawns to fill the board in every legal way. I predict that Rybka 4 couldn't even do this in under a year i.e. it would take Rybka 4 a year just to determine the total number of starting conditions.
The kicker is that if we eliminate the fifty move rule, then the total number of positions that can arise either checkmate, insufficient mating material, or a three-fold repetition is finite (or what I like to call exfinite). I would "guess" that the total number is somewhere between 1 X 10^1000 to 1 x 10^10,000 positions. This will generally be regarded as the largest finite number that can occur. Can you imagine the level of complexity that could arise on a chess board the size of the universe?
This is based on intuition not calculation. How long will it take a computer to arrive at the same conclusion?
Why would God want to know every position in chess?
A test of human intelligence versus computer intelligence is this: When I gave a 1700 computer and Fritz 8, a 2700 computer, the same starting position i.e. 1.e4 Nf6 2.d4 Ng8 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3 Ng8 5.Bc4 Nf6 6.Bf4 Ng8 7.Qd2 Nf6 8.O-O-O Ng8 9.Rhe1, a position I call Magic, after 9...e6, both computers replied, 10.Kb1, the 1700 computer at 1 hour/move and Fritz 8 at 120'40. The computers could see no way to improve their position, so they both tried to increase the scope of their Rooks.
Most human professionals would play either 10.e5 or 10.d5 to fix the pawns.
Computers will always suffer from the "sieve" problem i.e. at first the holes were big enough to allow boulders through. As each hole was plugged, ten smaller holes appeared. As each smaller hole was plugged, ten smaller holes appeared.
Now imagine the computer when faced with equivalent positions where it has to make a choice, it will "flip" a programming coin and will consistently guess wrong whereas a human professional will consistently guess right.
Now imagine computer weaknesses 100 years from now as a drop of fluid .01 micron wide. It joins another tiny speck downstream. The drops get bigger and bigger and eventually become a trickle, the trickle becomes a stream, the stream a torrent and then a flood.
Think of the flood as the computer "hanging" a pawn during a "flood". Go beyond that, 1000 moves, and you arrive at checkmate. This scenario is based on faith and intuition in the supremacy of human imagination, intuition and calculation compared to computer logic.