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    saxnot ➡️ HOA, GPN (saxnot@chaos.social)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Feb-2025 09:22:28 JSTsaxnot ➡️ HOA, GPNsaxnot ➡️ HOA, GPN
    in reply to
    • boghana

    @boghan i've researched Alex O'Connors fine tuning argument and it appears to be identical to the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watchmaker_analogy or "intelligent design".

    We have lots of evidence of evolution creating complex organs and species with unsuited organs dying off.

    That argument is old as hell and the argument is not sound.
    We observe something (complex beings).
    We have idea 1 in the race (evolution) and idea 2 of an intelligent design created by an god.
    We have a bunch of evidence for idea 1 but why…

    In conversationabout 4 months ago from chaos.socialpermalink

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      Watchmaker analogy
      The watchmaker analogy or watchmaker argument is a teleological argument, an argument for the existence of God. In broad terms, the watchmaker analogy states that just as it is readily observed that a watch (e.g.: a pocket watch) did not come to be accidentally or on its own but rather through the intentional handiwork of a skilled watchmaker, it is also readily observed that nature did not come to be accidentally or on its own but through the intentional handiwork of an intelligent designer. The watchmaker analogy originated in natural theology and is often used to argue for the pseudoscientific concept of intelligent design. The analogy states that a design implies a designer, by an intelligent designer, i.e. a creator deity. The watchmaker analogy was given by William Paley in his 1802 book Natural Theology or Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity. The original analogy played a prominent role in natural theology and the "argument from design," where it was used to support arguments for the existence of God of the universe, in both Christianity and Deism. Prior to Paley, however, Sir Isaac Newton, René Descartes, and others from the time of...
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