It seems that dartagnan is reluctant to enunciate any religious propositions, except perhaps for the following.
I object to this because "reluctant" suggests I have more, but that I'm hiding them. I have other reasons why I believe God exists, but the only religious propositon I have is that God does exist.
(a) There is an entity that dartagnan calls "God". The only specification given for the nature of this entity is that " it/he/she is responsible for our present reality".
Correct.
(b) This entity has, during the period for which we have some historical information, been trying to tell the human race "of his/her/its existence and [to give them] a sense of purpose in the world".
Well, not exactly. I think humans have the capacity to perceive God from one degree to another, and God will be perceived because he exists, the same way the sun exists.
(c) Morality is derivative from the religions based on claims for the existence of one or more of the entities referred to in (a) (we might call them "theistic" religions; there are others of course), to whose alleged revelations dartagnan refers in (b). We would not have morality without them.
Let me clarify, and this is a slippery topic that needs constant clarification. I think morality is obtainable without religion, but its source is divine. The fact that our modern standards of morality derive from religious sources, is of no surprise.
(d) The argument from design is part of the case for belief in the entity referred to in (a).
Yes, teleological arguments impress me greatly, as does the argument from consciousness.
How does religion differ from and (it is claimed) complement science?
Relgion is mankind's attempt to answer questions unanswerable by science. I think religion can complement science in the sense that it explains important aspects of our reality that science cannot. These explanatons are often teleological, and not "scientific" in our modern sense. Bu teological explanations resonate with people, especially when science hits a brick wall. Not a stumbling block, but a brick wall.
For example, human consciousness and experience. Evolutionary biologist, and atheist, Michael Ruse put it this way:
Why should a bunch of atoms have thinking ability? Why should I, even as I write now, be able to reflect on what I am doing and why should you, even as you read now, be able to ponder my points, agreeing or disagreeing, with pleasure or pain, deciding to refute me or deciding that I am just not worth the effort? No one, certainly not the Darwinian as such, seems to have any answer to this.... The point is that there is no scientific answer.
Another atheist Steve Pinker said, "virtually nothing is known about teh functoning microcircuitry of the brain... The existence of first-person experience is not explainable by science." Daniel Dennett tries to simply dismiss the problem by declaring consciousness a cognitive illusion.
I believe science is showing that mind and brain are two different things. JP Moreland discussed some of these scientific experiments, and noted also that if physicalism is true, then there is no way we could have free will since our decisions and cognitive skills would be reduced to physical processes alone, which are subject to the natural laws. So whatever choices we made, we could not be held accountable for them since we were simply programmed robots acting according to the laws of nature. And there goes the basis for morality and justice. Who could blame Hitler if he had no choice in what he did? That is why the insanity plea is a popular one in court of law. It relinquishes one of any accountability.
Have I got that more or less right?
More or less.
There is one bit of dartagnan's writing that I cannot seem to grasp the sense of: Is he saying here that "ancient writers' explained the values of universal constants (of physics, presumably - things like Planck's constant, the value of the universal gravitational constant, and so on) thousands of years ago?
In a sense, yes. The moment they insisted the universe was created for us, this fully explained why the laws of the universe are as they are. This is the logical force behind Brandon Carter's dicovery of the Anthropic Principle. The only shared value among the hundreds of fundamental constants throughout the cosmos, is that they are as they are for life to exist on earth. If any one of these were altered in the slightest degree, our universe would not be capable of producing life. More interesting to me is that the universe seems to have known we were coming, because the laws are so mathematiclly tied together that the age of the universe has to be exactly as it is. The weak and strong nuclear forces have to be exactly as they are. The speed of light, the force of gravity, etc.
Since dartagnan plainly cannot be claiming that (e.g.) Plato had a discussion of the value of e/m in the Timaeus, what does he mean?
That when the apostle Paul said the heavens (cosmos) declare the glory of God, he was possibly referring to something science has only recently been able to figure out. After all, that is where much of the evidence is coming from. Coincidence? Possibly. But intriguing nonetheless. And who was this ancient author of Genesis who claimed, without any scientifc training, that the universe had a beginning, and that plants and animals preexisted mankind? Concidence? Possibly. It seems the more we learn about the universe, the more it looks like a put up job.
I can't remember being taught the truth of that proposition when I studied science. Different syllabus from dartagnan's, no doubt.
Probably because it would be forbidden in class to begin with, else the atheists would have a conniption fit about breaching the separaton of Church and state. We know how that goes.
Kevin stands in good company with his statement. The majority of truly great scientists would agree with him.
Indeed. One might consider Einstein a great scientist. This is what he had to say on the matter, and I agree completely:
My religiosity consists of a humble admiration of the infintely superior spirit who reveals himself in the slight details we are able to perceive with our frail and feeble minds. That deeply emotional conviction of the presence of a superior reasoning power, which is revealed in the incomprehensible universe, forms my idea of God...Everyone who is seriously engaged in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that the laws of nature manifest the existence of a spirit vastly superior to that of men, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble.
I am not an atheist, and I don't think I can call myself a pantheist (note: Spinoza was a pantheist). We are in the position of a little child entering a huge library filled with books in many languages. The child knows someone must have written those books. It does not know how. It does not understand the languages in which they are written. The child dimly suspects a mysterious order in the arrangement of those books but doesn't know what it is. That, it seems to me, is the attitude of even the most intelligent human being towards God. We see the universe marvelously arranged and obeying certain laws but only dimly understand these laws. Our limited minds grasp the mysterious force that moves the constellations.
And just think, the is the guy whom Dawkins referred to as an "atheist" on several occasions in his "God Delusion." That's astounding.
This might be my last post for a couple of days.