[quote name='luke warm' date='Jan 7 2009, 06:27 PM']
Occam's Razor. A supreme being requires a large number of unlikely things to be assumed. Spontaneous generation of life just requires the right chemicals and energy sources to be around, and it only has to happen once.[/QUOTE]
peculiar... i'd think occam's razor more easily fits in with a creator rather than no creator... [/QUOTE]
That is true only because believers in supreme beings shut down their analytical faculties at the point where they state: God did this.
God is, to a religious person, what a 'black box' is to an engineer... it is a device that does something important, but for current purposes, need not be analyzed.
Of course, some would argue that, when we are looking at ultimate causes, the black box should be analyzed
I admit that physics, as currently understood, only takes us so far... we can explain the universe from a very early time.. tiny fractions of a second after the big bang... all the way to star formation, planetary creation, and the beginnings of life... and string theory suggests that we may be able to intellectually envisage some form of existence beyond that currently susceptible to detection via technology... but no-one yet has any explanation, founded in physics, that answers the ultimate questions about why the universe or multiverses exist.
It may well be that the question is meaningless. It may also be that minds that evolved as our did are incapable of ever comprehending the 'answers'.
But calling the as-yet-unknown areas 'god' is not recourse to Occam's razor.. it is an intellectually lazy avoidance of thought.
As for Skolnick's issues... I suspect that part of the problem may lie in terminology. When I was a student.. high school level... I never studied these areas in university... I learned that a species was a distinct grouping of individuals. Physics was also taught, at that time, in an analogous manner.
We now understand that almost everything is a continuum of some kind. We have opened our intellectual eyes to the reality of a far more complex, interactive, messy, and glorious reality. A reality in which viruses can transfer genes from one creature to another.. a reality in which the ring species to which others have referred can exist. A reality in which new species have arisen in laboratories.. a reality in which chaos theory results in a much more subtle understanding of the world than was possible 50 years ago. And so on, and so on.
We tend to lump entities into discreet blocks, presumably because the tendency to do so fostered reproductive success in our ancestors.. just as we presume that our tendency to see pattern in random dots (or the night sky) arose as an evolutionary adaptation. But, as we move from being primarily actors to being primarily thinkers, in terms of our interaction with the universe, these old tendencies can be counter-productive.. our common sense may be common, but it may no longer be sensible.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari