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  Topic: Anthropic/anthropocentric principle< Next Oldest | Next Newest >  
niiicholas



Posts: 319
Joined: May 2002

(Permalink) Posted: June 12 2003,16:54   

I have no strong opinions on the anthropic principle, but I figured I'd repost this little Sagan quote I posted at ARN:

Quote
Originally posted by LlaniteDave:
[qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Another:
[qb]
However, in regards to complexity - we have a problem (and not just the usual problem of definition). Complexity cannot be selected for in and of itself - and evolution has no foresight to the future opportunities complexity affords.  This will be true of all life, not just life of the substrate we know. Complex life is rare not because the earth is rare, but because there is no immediate selective benefit to complexity - usually only costs.

Complexity did not evolve with any reasonable speed on earth. It was a major transformation and an unintended result of symbiosis or predation.  That complex than bacteria only evolved once is telling. It is a silent, lonely answer to Fermi's paradox.[/qb]
Which also poses a problem for the "fine tuning" issue.  If the universe is "fine tuned" so that life can exist, in all the universe is the earth the only beneficiary of that fine tuning?  If ID is true, doesn't that predict that life, and complex life as well, should be ubiquitous throughout the galaxy?[/qb][/QUOTE]An exceedingly good point.  I recall a clever bit of Carl Sagan:

Quote
Our universe is almost incompatible with life -- or at least what we understand as necessary for life: Even if every star in a hundred billion galaxies had an Earthlike planet, without heroic technological measures life could prosper in only about 10^(-37) the volume of the Universe.  For clarity, let's write it out: only 0.000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 1 of our universe is hospitable to life.  Thirty-six zeroes before the one.  The rest is cold, radiation-riddled black vacuum.
(Pale Blue Dot, p. 34)



It is perfectly possible to imagine universes much more hospitable to life -- most early cosmologies were exactly that.

While I'm here, the interaction of the anthropic-principle-type design argument with the biological ID argument is *very* peculiar.  It was stated most pithily here:

Quote
The fact that the laws of the universe are perfect for life is evidence for a Designer. The fact that the laws of the universe can't produce life is evidence for a Designer. [23]
"The Quixotic Message", or "No Free Hunch"
http://www.talkdesign.org/faqs/hunch/hunch.html

(In http://www.arn.org/boards/ubb-get_topic-f-13-t-000751.html )

  
zinc fingers



Posts: 1
Joined: June 2003

(Permalink) Posted: June 20 2003,11:31   

ni3cholas wrote:

[/QUOTE]

Which also poses a problem for the "fine tuning" issue.  If the universe is "fine tuned" so that life can exist, in all the universe is the earth the only beneficiary of that fine tuning?  If ID is true, doesn't that predict that life, and complex life as well, should be ubiquitous throughout the galaxy?[/qb][/QUOTE]An exceedingly good point.  I recall a clever bit of Carl Sagan:

Quote  
Our universe is almost incompatible with life -- or at least what we understand as necessary for life: Even if every star in a hundred billion galaxies had an Earthlike planet, without heroic technological measures life could prosper in only about 10^(-37) the volume of the Universe.  For clarity, let's write it out: only 0.000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 1 of our universe is hospitable to life.  Thirty-six zeroes before the one.  The rest is cold, radiation-riddled black vacuum.
(Pale Blue Dot, p. 34)



It is perfectly possible to imagine universes much more hospitable to life -- most early cosmologies were exactly that.

[END QUOTE]


There is more than one version of the AP, as I recall, but the only one that ever made sense to me was WAP, which I always understood not as an explanation so much as simply a corollary to the logical principle that propositions entail their necessary conditions:  If I know you won the lottery, I should expect to observe a world in which you play lotto.

Note that this *only* works if there aren't a lot of fairies and gods running around suspending the rules all the time.  If there are fairies who could poof you into a lottery winner without your first buying a ticket, all bets and inferences are off.

The universe looks exactly the way it should if life on earth occured without the help of fairies:  as Sagan put it, just barely hospitable to life.  In a metaphysics populated with super-powerful intelligences, there is no explanation for why we ought to observe such a thing, as opposed to an even friendlier universe  miraculously kept clean of other meddling life forms, or a completely hostile universe in which we nonetheless miraculously exist.

Von Smith
Fortuna nimis dat multis, satis nulli.

  
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