In addition to the above:
Hi Gonners,
Sriram’s problem is that he overreaches - hugely so. If, say, you help the little old lady next door across the road every day for twenty years and after she’s died you find she’s left you a little something in her will you may or may not want to call that “karma”, but essentially it’s a commonplace and there’s nothing mystical about it.
What Sriram then does though is to extrapolate from that an entire system of celestial checks and balances by which you’d also be more likely, say, to win the lottery for your kind deeds. Why he thinks that is anyone’s guess, but mine would be a large dose of confirmation bias – “Fred’s a really nice guy, and he just won the lottery – see, karma!” combined with ignoring the silent evidence of all the times nice people don’t win the lottery, horrible people do win it etc.
(emphasis mine)
Which is an interesting claim, because this is precisely what happens with certain evolutionary theories.
Evolution that is observable and works with what is already present is extrapolated therefrom, to create a whole discourse where it is claimed that all life descended from a single common ancestor.
More and more, it can be observed here that arguments used against various religious beliefs are (arguably) not only used incorrectly, they are true of the worldview of some that use them, so e.g. those claiming
God of the gaps do so precisely because they are using
evolution of the gaps, hoping that people will not notice the difference between interpolation and extrapolation.