I think we are often tempted to short-circuit that process of enquiry, to posit an intelligent law giver in some higher realm who just decided that things should be as they are but that looks like a category fail to me, not least because intelligence itself is derivative and contingent and so is a poor candidate for any ultimate answer to 'why' questions. If we find a watch lying on the beach one day we might assume that someone must have made it. Fair enough for an everyday observation, but it's inadequate to extrapolate that line of reasoning into a formulation for the ultimate reason of all things. Clearly the watch was made by a watch maker, superficially true, yes, but the watch maker himself is a contingent derivative thing, he is a sort of human which is a sort of primate which is a sort of mammal which is a sort of vertebrate which is a sort of multicellular eukaryote which is a bounded replicating metabolic system which is a form of energy exchange which is contingent on thermodynamic law which comes back down to the application of the laws of probability which in themselves are not contingent and are inevitably true in all possible worlds. A tornado racing through an aircraft hanger might reduce the Boeing 747 to clutter, but a tornado racing through a scrapyard never spontaneously assembles a Boeing 747; why, not because it is impossible but rather because it is improbable. Thermodynamics ultimately boils down to the immutable laws of probability and these laws need no giver.
Hi again torridon,
And thanks again for the above post.
We appear to agree that
"the application of the laws of probability .......... are inevitably true in all possible worlds".
Probability is a mathematical concept not observable with our five senses (discovered in about AD 1654), but is an abstract concept without which modern science could not function. If it were not objective (true independent of human minds), then modern science would be meaningless.
You are not correct about 'intelligence'. It is the human brain which is
"derivative and contingent and so is a poor candidate for any ultimate answers to 'why questions'", but intelligence itself is something different. Intelligence (in the natural world) is a measure of what the brains of evolutionary animals can achieve. For some humans it is an IQ of 100, for others (say watch-makers) it may be an IQ of 160, and for aliens (if they exist) who knows, say an IQ of 2000! However, for an immaterial God (the Logos), there would be no limit as he (like maths) would exist from or before the beginning of time and not be formed by evolution.
A claim that
"these laws need no giver" is an opinion without evidence. On the other hand, in our experience of this world, mathematical ability and personal intelligence go hand in hand, and nobody has explained how the situation would or could be different elsewhere.
Maths is a function of rational intelligence, with higher maths needing above average intelligence, and ground breaking maths needing exceptional intelligence. In all known experience, the more complex the maths, the higher is the IQ which is needed. This escalating need for intelligence makes it plausable abductive reasoning to posit the existence of an immaterial mathematician 'law giver' underlying the complex abstract mathematical nature of the physical Universe.
One final point, objective existence of mathematical concepts (independent of the human mind) is a valid abductive reason for believing in a God who sustains the Universe, but it is the goodness and miracles of Jesus which are the primary reasons for Christian belief.
I hope you find this interesting
God bless