Is it unreasonable to believe in a Creator?

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SonOh1's picture
Pardon, ...stars *form* from

Pardon, ...stars *form* from nebulae and neither stars *nor* nebulae have been observed...

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
SonOh1: Summary: There could

SonOh1: Summary: There could be a god as much as there could not be a god but it is outside of our control and observation. The universe is how it is and our visions must fall into the scheme of the universe in order for them to be plausible. (even then our visions may not be correct)

Gerry: I agree the limited data we have is ambiguous to a great degree. This leaves us apparently free to choose, not just in words but in actions, and thus reveal who we are (or wish to be).

Travis Paskiewicz's picture
Gerry, much of what we know

Gerry, much of what we know about the universe was not "dreamed up" or "made to happen". It was simply discovering the nature of the processes causing things to happen. That is not proof one way or the other for an intelligent creator, as the processes we observe don't display intelligence in any capacity we understand it.

This only leaves a slim few options. One, there is no intelligence behind the universe, and it is simply static processes, the result of chaotic forces creating structure. Option 2, the universal intelligence far exceeds our own comprehension, but the natural processes are heading for a defined goal or state (That we don't know).

So which point are you trying to argue exactly? Because we all know this is another "intelligent creator" arguement, and being the courteous person that I am, I'm offering you the chance to slingshot this arguement passed your badly phrased question about how only everything in existence is "dreamed up and made to happen".

So what exactley is your proof that there is an intelligent creator? Or were you hinging your argument on the fact that that nothing existential could have caused the big bang, because nothing existed prior to existence?

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Travis Paskiewicz: ...much of

Travis Paskiewicz: ...much of what we know about the universe was not "dreamed up" or "made to happen".

Gerry: My little syllogism (following the rather lengthy discussion above) is now shorter and hopefully easier to understand:

Major Premise: Some things that appear to be designed, actually are.
Minor Premise: Some things in nature appear to be designed.
Conclusion: It is not unreasonable to believe that some things in nature may be designed.

It seems we simply don't know, for sure, that (as you say), "much of what we know about the universe was not "dreamed up" or "made to happen". Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't.

Travis Paskiewicz: It was simply discovering the nature of the processes causing things to happen.

Gerry: I don't deny that there are such things as secondary causes. For example (as discussed above), I write a program that produces drawings of landscapes with some degree of autonomy. The program is a directly created thing; the drawings are indirectly created. But they still are ultimately the result of design.

Travis Paskiewicz: That is not proof one way or the other for an intelligent creator, as the processes we observe don't display intelligence in any capacity we understand it.

Gerry: You're forgetting about the processes we all use to create things, like these posts; those processes definitely show intelligence, planning, purpose, design, etc. I find it hard to believe that such processes could spontaneously arise from non-intelligent, undirected processes and thus assume that there must be something intelligent behind it all. Seems like a very reasonable assumption to me.

Travis Paskiewicz: This only leaves a slim few options. One, there is no intelligence behind the universe, and it is simply static processes, the result of chaotic forces creating structure.

Gerry: Yeah, we can throw that one out -- at least until somebody can demonstrate that "chaotic forces" are capable of "creating structure" all on their own.

Travis Paskiewicz: Option 2, the universal intelligence far exceeds our own comprehension,

Gerry: That seems pretty obvious, I think; otherwise we wouldn't have to investigate this "universal intelligence" through a study of His works; we'd simply know it all already.

Travis Paskiewicz: ...but the natural processes are heading for a defined goal or state (That we don't know).

Gerry: You're right: we don't know.

Travis Paskiewicz: So which point are you trying to argue exactly?

Gerry: I'm arguing that (1) It's not unreasonable to POSTULATE an Intelligent Designer ("postulate" meand "to assume an unproven premise is true for the sake of further reasoning"); and (2) once we do that, we find the rest of our reasoning is on simple, familiar, and very practical ground.

Travis Paskiewicz: Because we all know this is another "intelligent creator" arguement,

Gerry: Yes it is.

Travis Paskiewicz: ...and being the courteous person that I am, I'm offering you the chance to slingshot this arguement passed your badly phrased question about how only everything in existence is "dreamed up and made to happen".

Gerry: Thanks for the courtesy.

Travis Paskiewicz: So what exactley is your proof that there is an intelligent creator?

Gerry: As I've said several times above, I offer no proof. Nor do I need any. My Creator is an axiom, a postulate, an "unproven premise that is accepted as true for the sake of further reasoning." The quality and value of this major premise is thus determined, not by proofs, but by the fruits of the subsequent reasoning. Which are many.

Travis Paskiewicz: Or were you hinging your argument on the fact that that nothing existential could have caused the big bang, because nothing existed prior to existence?

Gerry: I do think it's impossible to get something from nothing, which also means you can't get more out of something than is in the something to begin with. But that's not what my argument hinges on.

Bekah Wells's picture
I think it might be possible

I think it might be possible for there to be a deity, for example- what controls nature? Does it even have control? Could there be something out there controlling it? Maybe. Unlikely, but anything is possible. I just don't believe that deity can be anything as described in religious texts.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Bekah Wells: I think it might

Bekah Wells: I think it might be possible for there to be a deity, for example- what controls nature? Does it even have control? Could there be something out there controlling it? Maybe. Unlikely, but anything is possible. I just don't believe that deity can be anything as described in religious texts.

Gerry: I find it helpful to think of books and authors. The characters in a book live in an entirely different world than the author of the book. And if it's a sci-fi or fantasy book, the laws of physics in the two worlds may even be different. Their time-lines certainly are: a day with the author may be just a few minutes -- or several years -- for the characters in the book, depending on how fast the author is writing. And of course the characters could only get to know the author if he or she decided to reveal him- or herself to them.

Ellie Harris's picture
Gerry do you believe the

Gerry do you believe the Christian god created the cosmos?

Jeff Vella Leone's picture
"Gerry: My argument is more

"Gerry: My argument is more general than that. We KNOW that complex, functional, practical things can come from intelligent design with a specific purpose in mind; that's experience that everyone has. We don't know if such things can come from random mutations and a non-intelligent selection mechanism; that's a theory at best."

Yea correct here (although it is a hypothesis, not even a theory).

Gerry:"you can't (in my view) get personality (for example) out of something that is impersonal"
Gerry: No, my point of view IS based on evidence, the evidence just given: that the one view has the support of the experience of humans everywhere, the other doesn't"

You cannot start your claim from a theoretical perspective then after 2 pages later redefine the claim and saying, it is based on evidence you did not provide yet.

This does not mean that there is no evidence of design.

Your claim was about design and it does not involve god in it.
Or at least you haven't provided a link here yet.

So let us assume design for now and assume that everything is designed, including how nature works etc...

How does this show in any way that you own personal god had anything to do with it?
"Which is a thing that is commonly known, not as "energy in a vacuum", but God."

Correct me if I am wrong here about your main claim:

You are first assuming that personality does not come from nature, then you are assuming that 'energy in the vacuum'(or ANY god) does create the world around us, then you are assuming that YOUR god has a personality to begin with(there is no evidence of that)
Then you are trying to say that since we have personality and god has personality too, we are somewhat linked?

Design does not equal god at all.
It is just saying that we may not be the first species capable of design.

If you do not consider well all your assumptions, you will never understand the truth, even if it is in front of your face.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Ellie Harris: Gerry do you

Ellie Harris: Gerry do you believe the Christian god created the cosmos?

Gerry: If I knew you were picturing "the Christian god" as I do, I would say yes. But I suspect our pictures are quite different. But let me say this: I look around and I find three things that are each very curious trinities: time, space, and matter. Specifically, all points in time are essentially the same; and yet to understand time, we have to think in terms of past, present, and future which are very different things indeed. Likewise for space: length, width, depth, so much alike that a simple rotation of the axes can turn one into the other; and yet quite different in practice. Again, for matter: solids, liquids, and gasses, interchangeable, yet significantly different in any particular state. So it seems reasonable to me that "the Christian God" -- who is defined as a Trinity of three equal and yet distinct persons -- is uniquely suited to be the Creator of the universe we find ourselves; especially when one considers that the doctrine of the Trinity appears to have arisen among people who were unaware of the parallels I just outlined. So in short, yes.

Ellie Harris's picture
So you believe the Christian

So you believe the Christian god created the universe without that god being demonstrated to exist, without having an uncreated cosmos to make the distinction between an created an uncreated cosmos, and wish to debate that this is reasonable? This cannot even come close to being logical until you demonstrate that your creator exist Gerry.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Jeff Vella Leone: So let us

Jeff Vella Leone: So let us assume design for now and assume that everything is designed, including how nature works etc... How does this show in any way that you own personal god had anything to do with it?

Gerry: Design implies a designer. The designer of everything I (and many others) call God.

Jeff Vella Leone: "Which is a thing that is commonly known, not as "energy in a vacuum", but God." Correct me if I am wrong here about your main claim: You are first assuming that personality does not come from nature, then you are assuming that 'energy in the vacuum'(or ANY god) does create the world around us, then you are assuming that YOUR god has a personality to begin with(there is no evidence of that) Then you are trying to say that since we have personality and god has personality too, we are somewhat linked?

Gerry: I'm saying that you can't get more out of something than is there to begin with. Let's call that the TANSTAAFL ("There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch") rule for short. So if we have personality, our Creator must also have a personality to "pass on" to us; if we have a moral sense, our Creator must also have a moral sense to pass on to us; etc.

Jeff Vella Leone: Design does not equal god at all.

Gerry: Agreed. Design IMPLIES a designer.

Jeff Vella Leone: It is just saying that we may not be the first species capable of design.

Gerry: True. But eventually you have to get to the First Creator, which I (and may others) call God, and the TANSTAAFL rule tells us that He will have all the attributes of his creations, at least in potentiality.

Jeff Vella Leone: If you do not consider well all your assumptions, you will never understand the truth, even if it is in front of your face.

Gerry: Agreed.

Nyarlathotep's picture
Gerry: I'm saying that you

Gerry: I'm saying that you can't get more out of something than is there to begin with. Let's call that the TANSTAAFL ("There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch") rule for short.

You say it is important to question assumptions, but then continue to repeat this tired old non-sense, that we know isn't true.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Nyarlathotep: You say it is

Nyarlathotep: You say it is important to question assumptions, but then continue to repeat this tired old non-sense [the TANSTAFAAL ruyle], that we know isn't true.

Gerry: But I think it is true. Give me an example of how we can get more out of something than is there to begin with. I'll let you keep the Nobel prize, and I'll just take the perpetual motion machine. But seriously, give me an example.

Nyarlathotep's picture
Gerry: But I think it is true

Gerry: But I think it is true. Give me an example of how we can get more out of something than is there to begin with. I'll let you keep the Nobel prize, and I'll just take the perpetual motion machine. But seriously, give me an example.

We know you think it is true. There are a couple well known loop holes in the conversation of energy one of them is time-energy uncertainty: It is possible for the conversion of energy to be seemingly (there is a catch) violated for very short periods of time. This leads to all sorts of phenomena: the Casimir effect, the Lamb shift, Hawking radiation, particle self energy, the Higgs mechanism, dark energy, and many many more. The bad news is the Nobel prizes for that stuff is long gone (some more than 70 years ago). However none of those allows for perpetual motion machines.

Jeff Vella Leone's picture
"Gerry: I'm saying that you

"Gerry: I'm saying that you can't get more out of something than is there to begin with. Let's call that the TANSTAAFL ("There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch") rule for short. So if we have personality, our Creator must also have a personality to "pass on" to us; if we have a moral sense, our Creator must also have a moral sense to pass on to us; etc."

I don't think there is enough data for anybody to claim anything about creation, including:
"Gerry: So if we have personality, our Creator must also have a personality"
"Gerry: I'm saying that you can't get more out of something than is there to begin with."

So your assumption is not only arrogant and not based on evidence but is also unlikely.
We know that we can create something which does not have personality, why can't it be the other way round?

You are jumping to a conclusion here, so you are being narrow minded about something.
I wish you realize this. here you stopped analyzing possibilities and closed all other options.

"Jeff Vella Leone: Design does not equal god at all.
Gerry: Agreed. Design IMPLIES a designer."
Gerry: True. But eventually you have to get to the First Creator, which I (and may others) call God, and the TANSTAAFL rule tells us that He will have all the attributes of his creations, at least in potentiality."

Our designer might not be the original designer, but just a product of yet another designer or a natural phenomena we haven't encountered yet.
(Still assuming design)

Your "TANSTAAFL rule" is a close minded assumption.

I can make an other close minded assumption and say that "man cannot possibly fly" or "transparent blood does not exist".

See the problem with close minded assumptions?

"Jeff Vella Leone: If you do not consider well all your assumptions, you will never understand the truth, even if it is in front of your face.

Gerry: Agreed."

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Nyarlathotep: There are a

Nyarlathotep: There are a couple well known loop holes in the conversation of energy one of them is time-energy uncertainty: It is possible for the conversion of energy to be seemingly (there is a catch) violated for very short periods of time. This leads to all sorts of phenomena: the Casimir effect, the Lamb shift, Hawking radiation, particle self energy, the Higgs mechanism, dark energy, and many many more.

Gerry: "Seemingly violated" isn't the same as "violated." And things like "dark energy" are purely hypothetical. It seems to me you're denying ubiquitous and obvious realities that you experience, first hand, on a daily basis (like design and purpose) for obscure and unsubstantiated and unsubstantial possibilities.

Nyarlathotep's picture
Seemingly violated is just

Seemingly violated is just the point, as it allows "something from nothing". Dark energy is not "purely hypothetical", it that HAS been measure, so has everything else on this except Hawking radiation. Daily experience is worthless in the physics of the very small, and often times it leads you to very bad conclusions (see your conclusions above!. Your further suggestion that these measured phenomenon (some measured over 60 year old) are unsubstantiated is quite disturbing.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Jeff Vella Leone: I don't

Jeff Vella Leone: I don't think there is enough data for anybody to claim anything about creation, including:
"Gerry: So if we have personality, our Creator must also have a personality"
"Gerry: I'm saying that you can't get more out of something than is there to begin with."
So your assumption is not only arrogant and not based on evidence but is also unlikely.

Gerry: My assumption is reasonable because we see (and do) the kind of creation I'm describing every day. I'm just extending the known into the unknown.

Jeff Vella Leone: We know that we can create something which does not have personality, why can't it be the other way round?

Gerry: The TANSTAFAAL rule. Things with personality can pass on personality (or not); things without personality have no personality to pass on.

Jeff Vella Leone: You are jumping to a conclusion here, so you are being narrow minded about something.
I wish you realize this. here you stopped analyzing possibilities and closed all other options.

Gerry: Not true. I've chosen a particular philosophy based on experience, study, logic, etc; but I'm open to other possibilities. What I'm not willing to do is abandon something that has served me well for decades for something that, on it face, is less simple, familiar, and practical.

Jeff Vella Leone: Our designer might not be the original designer, but just a product of yet another designer or a natural phenomena we haven't encountered yet. (Still assuming design)

Gerry: But eventually you get to the First Designer and that's who we call God. I think I already said that.

Jeff Vella Leone: Your "TANSTAAFL rule" is a close minded assumption.

Gerry: But one that appears to hold throughout the universe. One can talk like an agnostic, but nobody can live like one. We are forced by the nature of things to make choices, and those choices reveal our true beliefs.

Jeff Vella Leone: I can make an other close minded assumption and say that "man cannot possibly fly" or "transparent blood does not exist".

Gerry: Yes you can. And a thousand years ago you could have lived by those assumptions without fear of contradiction. Today, you couldn't. What are you looking for me to say? That all things are possible? Christians have been saying that for centuries. But if I have to choose between a philosophy that says TANSTAAFL because we've never seen such a thing, and a philosophy that outright rejects the possibility of a Creator because some people think if they look hard enough they might find an exception to the TANSTAAFL rule, well, I choose the former.

Jeff Vella Leone: See the problem with close minded assumptions?

Gerry: Again, what would you have me say? Nobody knows anything for sure. We place our bets and take our chances. How's that?

Jeff Vella Leone's picture
Gerry: Not true. I've chosen

Gerry: Not true. I've chosen a particular philosophy based on experience, study, logic, etc; but I'm open to other possibilities.

No you are not, "The TANSTAFAAL rule" gives no space for a formation of a person with a personality from someone or something that doesn't have a personality. It is a narrow minded assumption that excludes the other possibilities.
Do not lie please,

"Gerry: My assumption is reasonable because we see (and do) the kind of creation I'm describing every day. I'm just extending the known into the unknown."
Such as?
I don't remember me creating an other personality for the past 27 years.(all my life)

Not only that but you cannot generalize things like that without evidence. Your evidence (which you haven't presented) is not related to your claim. What we do today has no bearing on the original creation, we are a spec of dust compared to the origin of life, we are just 200 000 years old.

"Gerry: The TANSTAFAAL rule. Things with personality can pass on personality (or not); things without personality have no personality to pass on."
K it seems I have no choice, I will demolish this stupid assumption here an now:

An AI was invented that has no personality but has existence.(like AI of today)
100 000 years pass, it lost it's history memory and it(+ the genetics lab) is the only survivor of a catastrophe.
The fist question it says is what is my purpose?
The only piece of data left in the drive reads:
Operation Phenix: Prove "The TANSTAFAAL rule" WRONG".
Create random structures in DNA of living tissue until results in something different then the AI.
After 500 years of trial and error a successful sample was created that displays some kind of emotions.
Several variations were created, until the most efficient form was the result.

Conclusion
An AI without personality created someone with emotions and personality, without the help of someone who has a personality.
This is just one of the billion of other possibilities your close minded assumption does not cater for.

Happy now, your assumption is proven wrong, I did not want to do this but you cannot even admit that this IS a narrow minded assumption that has no evidence.

My close minded assumptions:
"I can make an other close minded assumption and say that "man cannot possibly fly" or "transparent blood does not exist"."

All had evidence for them before they were proven wrong.
Yours does not, it is just a generalization of something where there is not enough data to even make a guess.

"Gerry: Again, what would you have me say? Nobody knows anything for sure. We place our bets and take our chances. How's that?"

Follow where the evidence leads, not conclusions based on narrow minded assumptions,
You don't need to bet or take chances.
It is ok to say we don't know yet.

Trust me, your life will not be effected if you say that you don't know, it will instead get better.
If a pope decides to ban condoms, you are not forced to obey either.
+ many other stupid things they come up with.

You will find true freedom, the freedom of the mind.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Jeff Vella Leone: "The

Jeff Vella Leone: "The TANSTAFAAL rule" gives no space for a formation of a person with a personality from someone or something that doesn't have a personality. It is a narrow minded assumption that excludes the other possibilities.
Do not lie please,

Gerry: Yes, that's true. But I don't see any reason to abandon that principle since it has served me so well for decades and since it appears to be a universal law. BUT -- if someone could show me a practical example of where it doesn't hold true, then I would have to change my view. So while "narrow" in your evaluation, my view does not exclude other possibilities; it just requires evidence of a non-TANSTAAFL process to make it worth considering.

Jeff Vella Leone: Such as? I don't remember me creating an other personality for the past 27 years.(all my life)

Gerry: I've created a number of personalities. Characters in books I have written, characters in computer games I've coded, artificial intelligences that can draw and speak; small robots with distinct personalities, etc.

Jeff Vella Leone: Not only that but you cannot generalize things like that without evidence. Your evidence (which you haven't presented) is not related to your claim. What we do today has no bearing on the original creation, we are a spec of dust compared to the origin of life, we are just 200 000 years old.

Gerry: I would say about 6000 years old, as a race, which is about as far back as historical records go. But be that as it may, if we were indeed created in the image of our Creator, then projecting ourselves backward by analogy is a valid kind of generalization. Again, I'm saying anything of this is infallible; just simple, familiar, and practical.

Jeff Vella Leone: It seems I have no choice, I will demolish this stupid assumption here an now:

An AI was invented that has no personality but has existence.(like AI of today)
100 000 years pass, it lost it's history memory and it(+ the genetics lab) is the only survivor of a catastrophe.
The fist question it says is what is my purpose?
The only piece of data left in the drive reads:
Operation Phenix: Prove "The TANSTAAFL rule" WRONG".
Create random structures in DNA of living tissue until results in something different then the AI.
After 500 years of trial and error a successful sample was created that displays some kind of emotions.
Several variations were created, until the most efficient form was the result.
Conclusion
An AI without personality created someone with emotions and personality, without the help of someone who has a personality.
This is just one of the billion of other possibilities your close minded assumption does not cater for.

Gerry: Nice sci-fi story. Too bad we won't live 100,500 years to see if such a thing could actually happen. Again, you're abandoning the known for the imaginary.

Jeff Vella Leone: Happy now, your assumption is proven wrong,

Gerry: I don't see where you proved my assumption wrong; you just outlined a fictional sci-fi story.

Jeff Vella Leone: I did not want to do this but you cannot even admit that this IS a narrow minded assumption that has no evidence.

Gerry: The evidence for the TANSTAAFL rule is that there is no actual example that refutes it. So yes, it's tentative -- like all physical laws. But it's a good one, right up there with the laws of thermodynamics, etc.

Jeff Vella Leone: Follow where the evidence leads, not conclusions based on narrow minded assumptions,

Gerry: That's exactly what I've done. I have first-hand evidence that the creation-by-design paradigm is simple, familiar, and exceptionally practical. I have examples all around me of machines that are less than 100% efficient, but none that are more than 100% efficient (which leads me to the TANSTAAFL rule). Etc.

Jeff Vella Leone: You don't need to bet or take chances.

Gerry: Of course we do. We all act in faith, based on our beliefs, all day, every day. Will that chair support me, or should I test it before I sit down? Is this the right girl to marry? Should I stay in this job, or seek another? Etc. All things we have to make educated guesses about.

Jeff Vella Leone: It is ok to say we don't know yet.

Gerry: And I do say that about a great many things. Life on other planets? Don't know. Exceptions to the TANSTAAFL rule? Don't think so, but don't really know. Etc.

Jeff Vella Leone: Trust me, your life will not be effected if you say that you don't know, it will instead get better.

Gerry: I really don't know what you're trying to get at, Jeff.

Jeff Vella Leone: If a pope decides to ban condoms, you are not forced to obey either.

Gerry: Why would I care what the pope says about condoms? I'm 61 years old and my wife is 66. We don't need 'em.

Jeff Vella Leone: You will find true freedom, the freedom of the mind.

Gerry: But I'm not feeling unduly constrained as it is.

Jeff Vella Leone's picture
I'm done, this is my last

I'm done, this is my last post directed at you because you cannot see reason and lack interest to research anything you do not like but is vital for your biased conclusions.

"served me so well for decades and since it appears to be a universal law."
Served you well?, it doesn't look like it, to me you appear like a 5 year old kid which does not know anything and is too arrogant that thinks he knows everything.
This is reflected in your ridiculous unsupported claims.
You won't believe me of-course, then check what a law means before claiming it is a LAW.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_law
Yours is an assumption not a LAW. There is a huge difference.

"requires evidence of a non-TANSTAAFL process to make it worth considering."
LOL you are making a claim and then demand evidence against it to think otherwise.
I will copy you:
my assumption is that in a black hole there is a chocolate ice cream,
It is a law since no one has provided an example of the contrary.
I'm talking to a 5 year old kid here, that is the feeling I get seriously.

"Gerry: I've created a number of personalities. Characters in books I have written, characters in computer games I've coded, artificial intelligence that can draw and speak; small robots with distinct personalities, etc."
You have created ideas of personalities, fictional personalities, not living creatures.
Are you that arrogant to think to be able to create a whole human being with all the details possible, even the ones you don't know about?.(rhetorical) The only way to create a complete human is to create him for real, at least with our level of data about humans.(we don't have much info on the brain yet)

"Gerry: I would say about 6000 years old, as a race, which is about as far back as historical records go."
lol OK now you went down to 4 years old that hasn't gone out of his house yet.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%B6bekli_Tepe
This was placed there by your god around 10 000 BC by mistake then.

Apart from that the genome project proved that the first woman came out of Africa around 200 000 years ago.
"Mitochondrial DNA indicates that all living humans descend from one maternal source—christened Mitochondrial Eve—who lived in Africa between 100,000 and 200,000 years ago."
http://web.mit.edu/racescience/in_media/what_dna_says_about_human/

"Gerry: Nice sci-fi story. Too bad we won't live 100,500 years to see if such a thing could actually happen. Again, you're abandoning the known for the imaginary."
Are you claiming that a genetics lab or an AI are science fiction?

These are well known facts, we created a genetically modified cow already. It is not easy to build something with DNA, you just need time and a lot of patience, but it is definitely possible since we did it already.

"Gerry: I don't see where you proved my assumption wrong; you just outlined a fictional sci-fi story."
I proved to you that an AI can create something that the AI is not, (on his own and randomly) thus "The TANSTAFAAL rule" is wrong.

"BUT -- if someone could show me a practical example of where it doesn't hold true, then I would have to change my view."
I just did and the government can try it, he can just leave an AI messing with DNA in a genetics lab undisturbed until it creates a living creature that lives and shows emotions or personality.
It might take 30 or more years but eventually it will happen.

It is hard to give an example of something when our data is so limited on the subject but the fact that I can give an example even if 1 life time is not enough to fulfill it, it is a lot. It is still a valid example since the AI can keep doing it practiclly forever.

"The evidence for the TANSTAAFL rule is that there is no actual example that refutes it. So yes, it's tentative -- like all physical laws. But it's a good one, right up there with the laws of thermodynamics, etc."
OMG down to 3 years old now.
"absence of evidence is evidence of absence."
Laws have nothing to do with your incredibly stupid claim you just sprouted.
Get it out of your head, Assumptions are not Laws, all laws have verifiable evidence which supports them, usually mathematical.
Your assumption is just a generalization about creation which I proved wrong.

"Jeff Vella Leone: Follow where the evidence leads, not conclusions based on narrow minded assumptions,

Gerry: That's exactly what I've done. I have first-hand evidence that the creation-by-design paradigm is simple, familiar, and exceptionally practical. I have examples all around me of machines that are less than 100% efficient, but none that are more than 100% efficient (which leads me to the TANSTAAFL rule). Etc."

You did not, you are biased by the idea of god being the designer, and cannot even understand all the nonsense you just said.
Evidence of design does not mean "the TANSTAAFL rule", I thought we were clear on that.
Evidence of Design = designer
We humans are not 100% efficient, wtf are you smoking? This is an insult for all those people who are sick or disabled.
+ an insult to all humans who die instead of keep living like machines that need only maintenance to survive.
Do not exaggerate and lie about it.
With all the lies you said on this topic alone you are going to hell for sure :P

"Gerry: Why would I care what the pope says about condoms? I'm 61 years old and my wife is 66. We don't need 'em."
You are less then 3 years old in your mind, no wonder that you don't need them. Think about your children' s children ffs.
Why are MOST theists so hypocritical and egoistic in nature?

"Gerry: But I'm not feeling unduly constrained as it is."

You don't even know you are, that is the evil of religion.

That is the horror of religion, it makes perfectly decent people do and say incredibly stupid things.
Just like you showed in this topic.

http://captainscience.tumblr.com/post/23473954584/the-true-horror-of-rel...

http://captainscience.tumblr.com/post/23473954584/the-true-horror-of-rel...

Zaphod's picture
here is an excerpt form an

here is an excerpt form an earlier conversation between Travis Paskiewicz and Gerry where Gerry responds to a sentence Travis wrote:

Travis Paskiewicz: This only leaves a slim few options. One, there is no intelligence behind the universe, and it is simply static processes, the result of chaotic forces creating structure.

Gerry: Yeah, we can throw that one out -- at least until somebody can demonstrate that "chaotic forces" are capable of "creating structure" all on their own.

Zaphod: OK do birds count as a force of nature because we have many types of bird nest some made with stick and stone and mud, how about insects do they count they create all sorts of homes like paper wasp nest, bee hives and ants, they also do incredible things using dirt and in some cases their own bodies. I mean using just birds and bees you can come up with tons of example of nature creating things but if you want to get into wind, water and sand erosion they have and continue to form many many structures and patterns all over the world and these forces do so on other planets as well.

How about considering our solar system as an example, its held together and shaped and formed by gravity matter and one incredible reactor one of just 200 billion of such star systems that exist in our galaxy alone with estimates that there are least another 100 billion galaxies in our observable universe.

Nature has a weird way of creating things when conditions are right and then these things evolve and change like viruses and bacteria into different things better able to survive, like we do when we overcome obstacles I myself say we are an example of chaotic forces creating or perhaps leading to structure.

But man when you think of all the stars out there one one would be betting against some serious odds to wager we are the only intelligent life in the universe and I don't know about you but I wonder how advanced things have gotten out there, I mean I wonder if there are lifeforms on other planets who believe in what we would consider different gods than we do. they stand as like a chance to be right about their gods as any one of the thousands of religions here on earth do. But it would not be reasonable to assume any of the versions of a god exist based on odds alone, to do so would be to say it is unlikely all the other forms of god exist when we they stand just as good a chance no matter how crazy and wild the idea of their god may be their versions of god or a creator are just as unprofitable and disprovable as anyone else's.

ask instead this is it more reasonable to assume there is not a particular intelligent designer responsible for all this or is it more reasonable to assume its all nature. Nature does not deny anything, it just is, but believing in some rendition of a creator denies a lot. The difference between something that is and something believed but can not be proven is pretty much the definition of unreasonable. unreasonable means that it can not be reasoned or to put it another way underpinned by logic and good sense

So to conclude this yes it can be reasoned so it is reasonable to conclude there MAY BE SOME SORT OF CREATING FORCE but not necessarily a particularly intelligent one or some grand designer. We have evidence all around us of things being created by nature and you would have to be pretty closed minded not to acknowledge that, furthermore it is unlikely with all the other ideas that have been thought up for a creator that with all the versions that have came into existence and disappeared over the existence of humanity that any unproven creator we still believe in today is more likely than any unproven creators or gods we have had in human history as there are so many to choose from. It's also extremely unreasonable to assume these gods over chaotic creation which we see examples of all around us. Only once it has been proven for a creator to exist, only then it will be reasonable to consider it against other things that have been reasoned to be proven.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Jeff Vella Leone: I'm done,

Jeff Vella Leone: I'm done, this is my last post directed at you because you cannot see reason and lack interest to research anything you do not like but is vital for your biased conclusions.

Gerry: I will leave you with the last word, then, and not respond further to your final post. Thanks for the stimulating conversation. Sorry we weren't able to find more common ground.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Zaphod: OK do birds count as

Zaphod: OK do birds count as a force of nature because we have many types of bird nest some made with stick and stone and mud...

Gerry: The origin of birds is disputed: some say they spontaneously emerged over a long period of time, others that they were designed to behave as they do. So the example of bird's building nests (or bees building hives, etc) doesn't help.

Zaphod: ...wind, water and sand erosion they have and continue to form many many structures and patterns all over the world and these forces do so on other planets as well.

Gerry: This is a similar case, and we can go even deeper: hydrogen and oxygen combine to form water which has properties unlike both hydrogen and oxygen. Some argue that this is an example of "emergence" -- new properties arising, unbidden, from things without those properties; while others say, "What's the big deal? Hydrogen and oxygen were designed to combine in that way, and water was the expected (and planned) outcome." So again, no help.

To answer the question before us, we have to focus on things whose origin is known, undisputed, and well-understood. Things like cars and computers and catapults. These are the known, undisputed, and well-understood cases that can shed light on the unknow, disputed, and less-well-understood cases.

Zaphod: How about considering our solar system as an example, its held together and shaped and formed by gravity matter and one incredible reactor one of just 200 billion of such star systems that exist in our galaxy alone with estimates that there are least another 100 billion galaxies in our observable universe.

Gerry: See above.

Zaphod: Nature has a weird way of creating things when conditions are right and then these things evolve and change like viruses and bacteria into different things better able to survive, like we do when we overcome obstacles I myself say we are an example of chaotic forces creating or perhaps leading to structure.

Gerry: Things do not evolve in the sense you're suggesting, as far as we know. They change, yes; but the changes (as far as we know) never introduce new information into the system. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria, for example, are simpler (not more complex) things than the bacteria from which they spawned; the activation of the capability necessary to resist the antibiotics -- already latent in the bacteria -- actually makes them more specific and less likely to survive in the long run.

Zaphod: But man when you think of all the stars out there one one would be betting against some serious odds to wager we are the only intelligent life in the universe...

Gerry: Or even that this is the only universe that exists. Agreed.

Zaphod: ...and I don't know about you but I wonder how advanced things have gotten out there, I mean I wonder if there are lifeforms on other planets who believe in what we would consider different gods than we do. they stand as like a chance to be right about their gods as any one of the thousands of religions here on earth do.

Gerry: Sure.

Zaphod: But it would not be reasonable to assume any of the versions of a god exist based on odds alone, to do so would be to say it is unlikely all the other forms of god exist when we they stand just as good a chance no matter how crazy and wild the idea of their god may be their versions of god or a creator are just as unprofitable and disprovable as anyone else's.

Gerry: Well, I think "crazy and wild ideas" are less likely to be true than "prudent and well-reasoned ideas".

Zaphod: ask instead this is it more reasonable to assume there is not a particular intelligent designer responsible for all this or is it more reasonable to assume its all nature.

Gerry: That's exactly the question i do ask. And in the light of the actual (not imagined) evidence at hand -- especially the design-and-create paradigm that we all use to make complex, functioning things -- I suspect that there is a Creator of it all.

Zaphod: Nature does not deny anything, it just is,

Gerry: Until somebody says, "Nature is all there is." That's when the denying starts. It's like characters in a computer game insisting that their world is all that exists and there can't possible be any other (with programmers and pizza and coke in it).

Zaphod: but believing in some rendition of a creator denies a lot.

Gerry: Truth is always restrictive. If two plus two is four, it's not all those other numbers.

Zaphod: The difference between something that is and something believed but can not be proven is pretty much the definition of unreasonable.

Gerry: But that's not what's happening here. I'm saying that nature along isn't up to the job required of it; I'm also saying that we all observe and even participate in meta-natural processes every time we use our creative abilities to change the natural course of events. So clearly there's more here than just time, space, matter, and physical laws. There's US. And we (1) can't be explained by natural forces alone, and (2) appear to be above and beyond those forces, at least in part, because we can manipulate and control those forces, at least in part, simply by WILLING things to be different.

Zaphod: unreasonable means that it can not be reasoned or to put it another way underpinned by logic and good sense

Gerry: Yes. Which is why it is unreasonable to think that something as complex and functional as a person arose, unbidden, by random mutations and an unrelated and unguided selection filter. THAT's a stretch.

Zaphod: So to conclude this yes it can be reasoned so it is reasonable to conclude there MAY BE SOME SORT OF CREATING FORCE

Gerry: Not MAY BE, at this point in your sentence, but IS. WE are a creative force.

Zaphod: but not necessarily a particularly intelligent one or some grand designer.

Gerry: Yes. That's an hypothesis; an educated guess. A postulate (as I've said), accepted as true without proof so we can see where it logically leads us.

Zaphod: We have evidence all around us of things being created by nature

Gerry: I would say, "We have evidence all around us of nature doing what it was designed to do."

Zaphod: and you would have to be pretty closed minded not to acknowledge that,

Gerry: It's not closed minded to require a SUFFICIENT cause for an effect.

Zaphod: furthermore it is unlikely with all the other ideas that have been thought up for a creator that with all the versions that have came into existence and disappeared over the existence of humanity that any unproven creator we still believe in today is more likely than any unproven creators or gods we have had in human history as there are so many to choose from.

Gerry: That sounds like you're saying that because there are a lot of wrong answers that have been proposed to a particular question, there must not be a right answer. Or that the question itself is invalid. I disagree on both fronts.

Zaphod: It's also extremely unreasonable to assume these gods over chaotic creation which we see examples of all around us.

Gerry: But we don't see "chaotic creation" all around us. We see a tightly integrated system behaving as it was designed to behave. See how we can both ASSERT our position without proof? That means that how and why the system around us is what it is disputed; unknown. So we can't make appeals to it to bolster our parallel arguments; we have to appeal to that which is known and undisputed.

Zaphod: Only once it has been proven for a creator to exist, only then it will be reasonable to consider it

Gerry: Evidence for a Creator outside of the universe will, by definition, always be indirect. But there is plenty of such indirect evidence. The Creator's works, for example, around us, and the witness of reason and conscience within us.

Zaphod: ...other things that have been reasoned to be proven.

Gerry: Keep in mind, Zaphod, that those other things have NOT been proven. Or "reasoned to be proven".

Nyarlathotep's picture
Gerry:There's US. And we (1)

Gerry:There's US. And we (1) can't be explained by natural forces alone, and (2) appear to be above and beyond those forces, at least in part, because we can manipulate and control those forces, at least in part, simply by WILLING things to be different.

number 1 is debatable, number 2 is... well.... kind of nutty. Try willing yourself to not experience acceleration from the force of gravity (just make sure you got something soft under you when you try).

Zaphod's picture
I was going to comment on the

I was going to comment on the same quote.

Number 1: Yes we can we know where every element on the planet comes from, we know a lot about nature and the science of it. you have demonstrated repetitively Gerry in numerous conversations since you been here, that you don't understand the concepts of science or proof well. We know a lot about evolution and we see proof of it all the time, just because some people (and there are many) don't want to acknowledge or accept what it tells us is not reason enough to dismiss it. Much like faithful individuals try to say if you could just seek god God will show himself to you, if you just seek answers answers will show themselves to you.

Number 2: This is an area I know a lot about but if you can't grasp the ideas of science and proof I am not about to go down the road of explaining it to you. But I will say this much other things can WILL as you say things to be different just was well as we can and it is not a talent bestowed only to humans but more of a being alive thing. All things that are alive do this with including things with relatively unsophisticated minds and even things with minds not even considered to be minds do it. There is nothing special about US except our brains which enable us to be better at it especially when we truly understand the concept which if you really lack the understanding of how many things in this world work as you demonstrate, I doubt you do.

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Nyarlathotep: Number 2 is...

Nyarlathotep: Number 2 is... well.... kind of nutty. Try willing yourself to not experience acceleration from the force of gravity (just make sure you got something soft under you when you try).

Gerry: I didn't say we have absolute control over natural forces, just that we are, in many cases, able to influence them by shear acts of will. In other words, we can choose to change the natural course of events, and often do. Try this:

A couple of kids are playing ping pong. Their actions are constrained by two things: (a) the laws of physics, and (b) the rules of the game. Now Mom comes in, grabs the ball in mid-flight, and says, "Go wash your hands for dinner." Note that Mom did no violence to (a), the laws of physics. But she did interfere with (b), the rules of the game (for a higher purpose of her own).

So it is with all of us and the physical reality that surrounds us. We've been given no freedom regarding the physical laws; they are what they are. But we have been given great freedom regarding the "rules of the game". We can choose, for example, to let a tree grow naturally, in accord with the physical laws; or we can choose to harvest it, reshape it, and build a house with it. None of those latter things violate the laws of physics, of course; but all of them are "game changers" -- game changers that we conceived and implemented; thought up and made happen; creative acts -- new inputs -- that the physical system had to deal with, initiated soley and entirely by our very own willful acts.

Now if you want to argue that since we ourselves are the result of natural processes and thus our choices and acts are really not different in KIND from, say, a tree growing, fine. But note that that makes us nothing but machines who can't help doing what we do; machines that will soon cease to exist and be forgotten. Hard to take the ramblings of such a machine seriously.

On the other hand, if you suspect that when we make choices and influence the natural world around us we're really doing something more than just reacting to changes in the chemicals in our brains, well, then we not only have something to talk about, but there's actually a couple of "somebodies" there to do the talking!

Nyarlathotep's picture
notice the goal post move:

notice the goal post move:

Gerry said "And we (1) can't be explained by natural forces alone, and (2) appear to be above and beyond those forces". Then goes on to demonstrate that by an example of a woman interfering with the rules of a ping pong game. So apparently the rules of ping pong are "natural forces"....

Gerry Rzeppa's picture
Zaphod: But I will say this

Zaphod: But I will say this much other things can WILL as you say things to be different just was well as we can and it is not a talent bestowed only to humans but more of a being alive thing.

Gerry: I agree. In fact, I tentatively define "life" as that which actively opposes the increase of entropy.

Zaphod: All things that are alive do this with including things with relatively unsophisticated minds and even things with minds not even considered to be minds do it.

Gerry: Again, I agree. Life is something quite different than mere physical laws.

Zaphod: There is nothing special about US except our brains which enable us to be better at it

Gerry: It's WE who are better at it, not our brains; they are more like communication devices. And sure, they vary in capability. But the quality of the conversation that comes over a phone is primarily due to the person at the other end, not the physical device.

Zaphod: So apparently the rules of ping pong are "natural forces"....

Gerry: No, the rules of ping pong in the analogy are akin to the moral laws of the universe (as opposed to the physical laws). "Drop something and it falls" is an example of a physical law; "Lie, cheat, and steal and you'll find yourself untrusted" is an example of a moral law. It is in the realm of the moral laws (as well as other realms) that we have a lot of choice. If we harvest trees wantonly, we'll have no trees left; on the other hand, if we don't harvest trees at all, we'll have no houses. Which leads us to another moral law: "If we use our resources prudently, we will prosper; if we waste them, we will suffer." Note that these laws (and such decisions) are unknown to the life forms beneath us; and thus we have greater power, but also greater responsibility. Not unlike Spiderman.

Nyarlathotep's picture
you are playing pretty fast

you are playing pretty fast and loose with the term "law" i see.

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