Wiki wrote:Newton saw God as the masterful creator whose existence could not be denied in the face of the grandeur of all creation.[26] Nevertheless he rejected Leibniz' thesis that God would necessarily make a perfect world which requires no intervention from the creator. In Query 31 of the Opticks, Newton simultaneously made an argument from design and for the necessity of intervention:
Maybe "angels swoop in" was my own sarcasm, I thought I read that somewhere, but I'm happy to change it to the above. The main point was that he believed God intervened and did not create the perfect set of initial conditions. Others disagreed.
physics guy wrote:The question of design is then not about any alternative to initial conditions, as a causal explanation for why things are as they are, but about whether the initial conditions incorporate design, or not.
physics guy wrote:I figure that both sides agree, at least tentatively, that everything is the way it is because of the particular initial conditions at the start of the universe
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Yes, we are on the same page to that point. And I am then restating what you just said in these terms: there are two logically possible worlds, one where the set of initial conditions xyz were designed and another where the same conditions xyz were not.
When speaking of logical possibility, It's logically possible that I will not go to work on Monday, even if I really do end up going to work on Monday. If it turns out that I do go to work on Monday, then that must mean it was not physically possible for me to avoid work that day. However, it is not logically possible that I will wake up Monday and 2+2=5.
Inferences drawn from observation are not logically constrained to be what they are. If what I'm inferring about something is really logically constrained, then the inferences are a sham. Suppose I get up in the morning and count 3 white swans on my pond and 2 black swans and I call you on the phone and tell you that just eyeballing it, it looks like one more white swan than black. No problem. But If I tell you that I'm taking a good look here at my pond, and it's looking like based on the swans I'm watching, that 3 - 2 is 1, you'd think I'm nuts. And that's because it's not logically possible for 3 - 2 to be anything but one.
Physics Guy wrote: collapse into tautology, by in effect defining design to be CSI encoded in special initial conditions
That sounds about right.
The point i belabored above wasn't to explain what a tautology is, but to explain it in context of using the term "possible". For any inferences drawn from observation, the logical possibility of the inference not being true must exist even if the physical possibility does not exist due to determinism. But if I go out and examine the wing of the swan and run it through my CSI equations, and conclude, "no way that one evolved!" because as you point out the physical history of the universe is precisely the same designed or not if initial conditions xyz are the same, then the CSI equation can yield a false positive of "designed". Designed or not, Maxwell's equations don't yield different answer. All this is to say, that design is not something you can infer by making observations about the world. It still might be true that the world is designed, but for one, unless we can infer it from observation (at least in principle!), it has no place in a science class.
That's not to say that a theory about design is totally off the table. If it's not
logically possible for a world of our complexity to exist without design then that might totally be true and extremely interesting to learn about. Maybe there's a proof for it, like the proof for bi quadratic equations. But even if quadradic equations help us understand the physical world immensely, nothing has ever been learned about a bi quadradic equation from doing physics experiments.
A proof like that? Probably worth 100 Nobel prizes. I know where I'll put my money.