- #1
Seraph316
- 5
- 0
Has anyone yet asked a computer to calculate the chance of a Big Bang eventually forming thinking modern humans (e.g. Big Bang produces Brian Cox) purely by natural process and without some programme to channel things?
If so, can anyone tell me (even approximately) what the result of this calculation would be?
Obviously there is a question behind the question. You see, I am asking if it is reasonably to accept as practical or even possible that the Big Bang alone accounts for our existence if the actual chances of it happening are really astronomical, or if what is remotely possible in theory is almost inconceivable unlikely in reality.
Please bear with me as I try to explain what's itching away at the back of my mind. I'm thinking of Russian Roulette. The initial chance of a kill on the first pull of the trigger is 6 to 1 and, if the gun continues to click rather than bang, the chances reduce until the sixth pull of the trigger has to fire the revolver: a deadly but short game with a maximum of 6 attempts. But what happens if the referee spins the chamber after each pull of the trigger? The game becomes longer - in fact, theoretically, it could take forever because there is no maximum number of attampts. However, the chances are still good for a reasonably swift end to the game, maybe in an hour. But what if there are not 6 chambers to the revolver but 60 - with the chamber being spun after each attempt. Now the game is much less likely to end quickly - could it take a day? Now what if 6000?
Eventually, if the chamber is always spun - or the random element still allowed in play - then it becomes impractical, with larger astronomical numbers, to assume that the game will end or that a bang will ever happen. In theory it can, but will it really?
If you have a huge number of chances (trillions to 1) but the number is finite and reduces with each attempt, then eventually you must expect to get the result aimed for - the monkeys and typewriters eventually beget a working universe. But, if each attempt at a Big Bang starts out in the same way, then it is as if the chamber is spun anew each time and is just as astronomically unlikely at each attempt. In theory it is possible - but could it - would it - ever happen?
The last sobering thought is this. If the real chances of the Big Bang producing mankind by natural law and process are practically nil then - given that we are here - how did we happen? If chance and process cannot practically explain us, then is there real reason to assume a designer after all? Or - if the chances of us being here are trillions to 1 against - and we are here - then it follows by elimination that the chances of us being here by design are trillions to 1 for - QED!
"When you have eliminated the impossible then what remains, however improbable, must be the truth," Sherlock Holmes.
From school I remember this, "Adam and Eve and Kickmewell went down to the sea to bathe. Adam and Eve got drowned, but who do you think was saved?"
Does logic push us to inevitable but forbidden conclusions, and should we shy away from them?
If so, can anyone tell me (even approximately) what the result of this calculation would be?
Obviously there is a question behind the question. You see, I am asking if it is reasonably to accept as practical or even possible that the Big Bang alone accounts for our existence if the actual chances of it happening are really astronomical, or if what is remotely possible in theory is almost inconceivable unlikely in reality.
Please bear with me as I try to explain what's itching away at the back of my mind. I'm thinking of Russian Roulette. The initial chance of a kill on the first pull of the trigger is 6 to 1 and, if the gun continues to click rather than bang, the chances reduce until the sixth pull of the trigger has to fire the revolver: a deadly but short game with a maximum of 6 attempts. But what happens if the referee spins the chamber after each pull of the trigger? The game becomes longer - in fact, theoretically, it could take forever because there is no maximum number of attampts. However, the chances are still good for a reasonably swift end to the game, maybe in an hour. But what if there are not 6 chambers to the revolver but 60 - with the chamber being spun after each attempt. Now the game is much less likely to end quickly - could it take a day? Now what if 6000?
Eventually, if the chamber is always spun - or the random element still allowed in play - then it becomes impractical, with larger astronomical numbers, to assume that the game will end or that a bang will ever happen. In theory it can, but will it really?
If you have a huge number of chances (trillions to 1) but the number is finite and reduces with each attempt, then eventually you must expect to get the result aimed for - the monkeys and typewriters eventually beget a working universe. But, if each attempt at a Big Bang starts out in the same way, then it is as if the chamber is spun anew each time and is just as astronomically unlikely at each attempt. In theory it is possible - but could it - would it - ever happen?
The last sobering thought is this. If the real chances of the Big Bang producing mankind by natural law and process are practically nil then - given that we are here - how did we happen? If chance and process cannot practically explain us, then is there real reason to assume a designer after all? Or - if the chances of us being here are trillions to 1 against - and we are here - then it follows by elimination that the chances of us being here by design are trillions to 1 for - QED!
"When you have eliminated the impossible then what remains, however improbable, must be the truth," Sherlock Holmes.
From school I remember this, "Adam and Eve and Kickmewell went down to the sea to bathe. Adam and Eve got drowned, but who do you think was saved?"
Does logic push us to inevitable but forbidden conclusions, and should we shy away from them?