A Light in the Darkness wrote:That's an argument against the necessity of God to explain the complex universe, technically.
No it isn't. You might hope and pray to your atheist gods all day that it was an argument you wish it was, but it isn't. It is an argument against God. iI posits that in order for something as complex as God to exist, it must evolve over the span of millions of years. Since this is proposed to be contradictory to what God is, we can then conclude God does not exist.
You need to read what I wrote again. I just said exactly the same thing as you. Dawkins' argument is only an argument against the kind of God that cannot have evolved into existence. There are many different possible gods. You believe, and traditional Christians believe, in just one or some small number of the different possible concepts of God. Dawkins' argument is only contradicting the existence of God if it is not possible for God to have evolved.
If you believe in a God who couldn't have evolved then yes, Dawkins is arguing against your God. If your mind can wrap itself around notions of God that differ from the specific one your particular church, out of all possible religions, has embraced, then you can see that Dawkins' argument isn't technically an argument against the possible existence of any God.
Obviously, if you think God evolved, you escape the argument. But to continue to argue that what was written was a mere argument against explanatory necessity, when it obviously isn't, is to be irrationally charitable to one of your comrades.
I only escape the argument to the same extent that you attempt to define the argument by claiming that only your conception of God is valid, or possible. You think that Dawkins' argument is an argument against the existence of God only because you presume to know that only your particular conception of God is possible, and that one conception of God is countered by Dawkins' argument.
The way I read the whole thing, most traditional Christians, and I would lump Mormons in here too, argue that the universe embodies complexity which cannot have arisen without a God to have created it. That is, the complexity of the universe serves as evidence that a God is required in this universe. I think Dawkins' argument very cleverly counters this. The "God is necessary" argument is based on the notion that complexity cannot come from non-complexity, and that since the universe, at its very beginning, would have been non-complex, a God must therefore have existed to organize it into its present complexity. Dawkins says that the problem here is that you're still left with the presumption of a very complex entity, God, with no explanation. If God was necessary to explain the universe, what is necessary to explain God?
The Mormons have a clever "turtles all the way down" explanation of an infinite chain of Gods going back in time. The traditional Christians don't have that. Dawkins' argument, I feel, very cleverly attacks the traditional Christian view. It doesn't counter the Mormon view as effectively, except to point out that "it's turtles all the way down" isn't a very satisfying answer, and seems on its face to be absurd. Whether this is a rigorous counter to the argument could rightfully be debated. I think that, at best, Mormons argue themselves into a position of non-falsifiability and non-proof that they can use as a base to say "hey, it's really all about faith".
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen