RCSaunders wrote: ↑Mon Mar 28, 2022 1:39 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Mar 27, 2022 7:58 pm
But how does an accidental universe end up being rational? That's a good question. See if you can figure it out.
I do not know what you mean by rational.
That's easy. It means two things.
One is that the universe turns out to operate by predictable, mathematical regularities or "laws," rather than by some kind of unintelligible inconsistencies. (And that fact is what makes science, physics, engineering, and so on possible, of course.)
The second thing is that that same predictable, mathematical, regular universe is also intelligible to one of its particular creatures, namely, to rational human beings.
So it's an inherently rationally-behaving kind of universe, and is rationally understandable by us. Both facts are utterly surprising, if we assume that the universe itself is nothing more than a cosmic accident or explosion.
The universe has a specific nature which is comprehendible by means of human reason. (I suspect that what you really mean) If all you mean by the universe being, "rational," is that it can be identified and understood by means of human reason, where's the mystery?
Well, it's twofold: one is that some "accident" like the Big Bang somehow produced an orderly, law-governed universe balanced by very precise and minute physical laws; the second miracle is that there are living creatures within it that seem marvelously able to decode and unpack the rational order behind the universe. We should not expect either to have happened at all, if the origin of the universe itself is a mere accident.
The universe has to have some nature,
Actually, it doesn't have to have regular or law-like nature at all...and it also ought not, by chance to have creatures in it to "read" that order.
As for your characterization of the universe as an, accident, if by, "accident," you mean, "unintended,"
More than that.
Secular cosmology theorizes that the universe is not merely unintended, but is the product of a mere explosion. But when do you ever observe an "explosion" that issues in an extremely high level of order?
It's like if you go out into your driveway and stick a bomb in your Austin Mini...after it explodes, does it become a Mercedes? Or is it more certain to end up as a smoking heap of twisted metal? Of course, the answer is obvious: observably, accidents to not inject increased order into a situation, but increased disorder. And the same phenomenon, when applied to all things, we call the Second Law of Thermodynamics: things tend from a state of higher order into a state of lower order, right down to the genetic level.
Entropy is a universal, measurable, scientific, observable phenomenon.
Teleology--all purpose, meaning, and values begin and end with human consciousness...
Then there are no objective or real teleologies: just human delusions as if there are, and the actual universe has no place for such things. Because human beings
believing in a teleology will not make that teleology
real.