Gonners,
Yes I know it was only part of your reply, Gordon and Sane keep interrupting my train of thought but like Gordon I think you are getting ahead of yourself.
Getting ahead of myself how?
The point remains: either you conclude that the universe was designed for little old you and marvel at the chances of if being just right for that purpose, or you conclude that it's you who fits the universe rather then the other way around and thus that the fine tuning argument is broken.
No, what you need is a Universe for everything to be so damned perfect that all the ingredients were there in the first place for life to exist, only then can you go on to think about a planet that life can evolve on, and remember it is not me saying this but science, Hawking again,
No, all that's necessary is a universe in which life
of some type could have emerged. Given that there are reckoned to be around a trillion trillion stars and who knows how many attendant solar systems it's entirely possible that life
has emerged - many, many, many times and in many, many, many varieties.
Who know, maybe in some far-flung galaxy there's an evolved species of nine-headed, methane breathing dragon monster wondering just as earnestly as you are at the remarkable co-incidence of a universe being just right for him to be there too.
The remarkable fact is that the values of these numbers seem to have been finely adjusted to make possible the development of life.
Far be it from me to argue with the great man, but it's only remarkable if you think this particular type of life to be special. It's a philosophical rather than a scientific point.
He then chunters on about electric charge of electrons, but he end the paragraph by telling us,
"Never the less it seems clear that there are relatively few ranges of values for the numbers that would allow the development of any form of intelligent life."
I'm not sure how he gets there as, presumably, life need not necessary be "life as we know it" - but, either way, while there may be relatively few ranges there are vast numbers of
opportunities over time and over space for that narrow range to have happened.
Even if that wasn't the case though and there had been just one opportunity and it had produced just you, so what? That you exist says nothing to some supposed grand plan that had you all along as the end game.
So before you search for your goldilocks zone you first have to find your goldilocks universe.
Only if you think that you're special to the universe. Presumably though the methane monster would say just the same thing.
There you go again, it's all so easy, try saying it is all covered by H2O,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Properties_of_water
You need a Universe that can make that magical stuff called water, and it is magical, it is super-natural, without it we are all stuffed, without it we would not be here to be stuffed.
If you look at the science and can't see God in the equation then I can only think you are looking through the wrong end of the telescope.
There's nothing "magical" about water - it's just chemicals, albeit with relatively unusual properties. The only wrong end of the telescope viewing here is yours I think - try not looking from the perspective of the lottery winner and considering the picture as if you were Camelot instead: someone is bound to win, but you have no interest whatever in "fine tuning" the numbers so it's G.Onnagle of 23 Sevastopol Villas, Glasgow, United Kingdom, The World, The Galaxy, The Universe.