After laying out the weak anthropic principle (i.e., that things seem fine tuned to us because we are the lucky rational observers in a universe that is conducive toward our existence), the author argues that the improbability of our universe's having cosmic (rather than merely parochial) observers is evidence of fine tuning. This argument hinges upon the claim that the very precision with which we are able to observe the laws of nature governing the universe goes beyond the practical advantages associated with human evolution. That sounds plausible, but the author also claims that the fact that the universe has such precise laws goes against a Darwinian understanding of cosmogenesis. That sort of account would have order originate from chaos. My challenge to the claim re Darwinian cosmogenesis is that it might very well not require order originating from an all-encompassing chaos: instead, there might be an original, qualified chaos from which might arise a more state that is in some ways more orderly.
Thanks, Tim, for sharing this article with me:
http://www.ilsussidiario.net/News/English-Spoken-Here/Science-Technology/2014/2/27/LAWS-OF-NATURE-Genesis-of-a-Pythagorean-Universe/474175/
Thanks, Tim, for sharing this article with me:
http://www.ilsussidiario.net/News/English-Spoken-Here/Science-Technology/2014/2/27/LAWS-OF-NATURE-Genesis-of-a-Pythagorean-Universe/474175/
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