EAllusion wrote:I don't see how you get around the notion that human life is an accident by proposing that it is an accident that a being exists who happened to have the ability and desire to create humans. Either both those positions involve thinking life is an accident or both are open to avoiding that characterization. For instance, if you propose that God - the one who wanted to make humans - has necessary existence, then it is just as possible in the metaphysical sense that the universe qua the aggregate of all things has necessary existence. You can't special plead your way out of your own problem.
...I'm pretty sure I get what you're saying here EA. And it's a good point. I'm interested in how much this argument is connected to the evidence we currently have before us though...
...let's use an example. Let's say that there is some sensible numerical mapping of gene sequences. (Don't know enough about the details of gene sequences to know whether that's a sensible idea or not, but either way go with it for the purposes of the situation...)
Let's imagine that - when inspecting areas of 'junk' DNA, we end up consistently finding a repeated sequence of unicode characters that always spells out 'God Made This' - over and over again, in every language known to man.
Crazy example, but still...
...would your argument still count if this 'evidence' was before us?
EDIT: I'm not trying to make out I'm 'on to something' here. I'm kinda meaning this as a sanity check (for myself!) and a clarifier more than anything else..