Gonners,
Seems to me that you are changing the "why" into a "what" and I do know that it is perfectly acceptable to say, I dunno, but this is why I ask the question "why".
Actually it’s a “how” rather than a “what”, and I’m not changing it at all – “why” is ambiguous: it can mean “how” and it can also mean, ”for what reason did sentient being X do action Y?”. People who ask the question need to explain which version they mean.
Question like, why do we, humans understand how the Universe works ( in our very limited capacity ) Profdavey talks about fundamental laws, without these laws, we would not be here to talk about fundamental laws.
No we wouldn’t. Maybe something else would though, or maybe nothing would. Whatever. The point though is that the question there is a “how” one – ie,
by what processes do we understand how the universe works etc.
Everytime I look at the science behind how we got to where we are today I do a Prof Cox and think, it is a miracle we are even here, revisiting Prof Hawkings book "A Brief History of Time" even he asks the question, "why" did the universe start out with so nearly the critical rate of expansion......................if the rate of expansion one second after the big bang had been smaller by even one part in a hundred thousand million million, ( a big F*** me number ) the Universe would have recollapsed before it ever reached its present size.
Yup – and who knows – maybe that did happen bajillions of times before the current one happened. It may be highly unlikely that we specifically are here but it’s only miraculous of you assume that we were some kind of wished for outcome all along.
It's also for example a big F*** number against winning the lottery by the way. What's so special about the person who does though?
The amount of stuff that had to happen just for life is staggering, never mind the fact that we have intelligent life, and when you start to think of intelligent life ( not just us ) that for me points to, hell!! outside influence, God, purpose, God is in the equation ( what ever God is ) somewhere.
Well, first all that was necessary was for the conditions to be right for simple single-celled life. Evolution did the rest.
Second, that’s just an argument from personal incredulity: “I can’t imagine how we happened, therefore God”.
Third, again you just assume that “intelligent life” was meant to be all along. Maybe it wasn’t. Or maybe it was but in a different species entirely. Or maybe a much more intelligent species would have emerged if the starting conditions were slightly different.
Who can possibly say? We're still just a lottery winner though.