Fluffy, on 2013-October-23, 12:29, said:
Instead of an infinite universe think of a small one, something like an intelligent being that is born and raised inside a box somehow, with no outside contact. The universe for it would be the box. That intelligent being would wonder why is he locked on a box?, no because he doesn't know what a box is, he would think that his universe is small, and wonder what is the purpose of his existence.
The reality is that someone outside the box is locking him on the box and could break it anytime, but he doesn't want to. Why? There is really no way the being inside the box can ever know, he lacks perspective.
Your analogy is flawed, which is why you think you have no problem with regression.
To correct your analogy, to make it analogous to our thread, the person in the box is wondering who created what he perceives as his universe. Just as we do with ours.
Religious thinkers say that our universe was created by a god, and at least the vast majority of those who say they have thought about this, assert that the god stood outside the universe when he created it.
So our universe is analogous to your box.
Whether a box-dweller is thinking of this or it is just us, as outside observers who think this, answering the question of his existence by saying: 'somebody made a box and you are inside it' doesn't explain anything deep. Instead it begs the question: who made the somebody?
So you'd say, in your example: we made the box and we were made by god.
I then ask: who made the god?
That's where religion breaks down, because religion says that that question is meaningless, when what they really mean is that they can't allow the question to have meaning without admitting that their entire explanatory scheme is meaningless
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BTW My definition of god is that: something able to reak the physic laws we know.
I don't understand this at all. I regard this as a complete abandonment of imagination.
The one thing about which we can, I think, all agree is that humans have not, as a species, been able to identify all or even the 'correct' laws of physics. What we have, and what we call 'laws' are rules that appear to work well, including laws that seem to work to an astounding degree of accuracy.
But we 'know' that we are missing some key insights. Nobody has yet been able to reconcile gravity with quantum mechanics, as one major issue in physics.
Euclid developed laws that included that summing the angles of an object with 3 straight sides would always yield 180 degrees. Einstein said that this wasn't true in a gravitational field because of the curvature of space...not the curvature of the physical object forming the triangle, but the curvature of space itself. This could not be demonstrated at the time, but has been once humanity started launching satellites. This curvature has now actually been measured.
Say somehow this measurement were done at a time when Newtonian physics still dominated: Einstein died early, before his insights.
The measurements would show that the laws of physics, as we knew them, were being broken.
You'd see that as an act of god. A new Einstein would see this as an illustration that our understanding was incomplete and would discover space-time and its curvature in a gravitational field and explain the measurements.
If I saw something that appeared to violate the laws of physics, my intellectual curiosity would be engaged and the first thing I'd think of, after making sure it wasn't a conjuring trick, was that we need to find the underlying laws. Of course, I wouldn't be capable of actually doing that, since Einstein I ain't
But the principle is what counts. I certainly wouldn't get down on my knees and worship some 'god' simply for doing something I didn't understand. If I saw someone doing that, I'd see them as weak-minded idiots. In this day and age there is no reason to resort to superstition merely because we don't know the answers yet.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari