Contemporary Forms: Intelligibility and Suitability for the Emergence of Life
Today we are seeing forms of
the argument from design that seem actually to be generated within the field of
science rather than theology. This
happens where scientists reflect upon their discoveries and begin to ask the
megaquestions - these questions are not the sole province of philosophers and
theologians. Two forms of the argument
from design are grounded in the intelligibility of the universe and its
suitability for the emergence of life.
Remarkably there are attributes of the universe that make it amenable to
our rational understanding and to life as we know it:
A. Intelligibility
Mathematician and physicist
Paul Davies has observed, "The success of the scientific method at unlocking
the secrets of nature is so dazzling it can blind us to the greatest scientific
miracle of all: science works. Scientists themselves normally take it for
granted that we live in a rational, ordered cosmos subject to precise laws that
can be uncovered by human reasoning.
Yet why this is so remains a tantalizing mystery. (Davies, 1992, p. 20)
Why is the universe
intelligible? Why do mathematical
principles apply? Why does our science
work? "Einstein said that the only thing that is incomprehensible about
the world is that it is comprehensible."
(Barbour 1990, p. 141).
Our universe manifests order,
unity and coherence such that "laws of physics discovered in the
laboratory apply equally well to the atoms of a distant galaxy." (Davies 1944, p. 47) It is not only orderly; it manifests a very
particular kind of order; poised as Davies has noted, between the twin extremes
of simple regimented orderliness and random complexity. Organized variety is what we see.
B. Suitability for the Emergence of Life
Moreover this organization was
not built into the universe at its origin.
It has emerged from primeval chaos in a sequence of self-organizing
processes that have progressively enriched and complexified the evolving
universe in a more or less unidirectional manner" (Davies 1993, p. 45)
Nature seems to operate with a
kind of "optimization principle whereby the universe evolves to create
maximum richness and diversity. The
fact that this rich and complex variety emerges from the featureless inferno of
the Big Bang, and does so as a consequence of laws of stunning simplicity and
generality, indicates some sort of matching of means to ends that has a
distinct teleological flavor to it" (Davies 1994, p. 46).
Theoretical physicist Stephen
Weinberg at the end of his book, The First Three Minutes, makes the statement,
"the more the universe seems comprehensible, the more it also seems
pointless." Analysis of cosmos does not for him yield clear and evident
purpose. But advocates of the anthropic
principle John Barrow and Frank Tipler (also theoretical physicists) make a
rather different interpretation. The very laws that Weinberg takes to be
indifferent to human beings seem to them to suggest the presence of an
intelligence that "wanted" beings like us to evolve.
Biological systems do have some
very particular requirements and these requirements are in fact met by nature.
There are cosmic coincidences of striking proportions. The odds against this special set of
physical conditions and natural laws that make our lives possible are
astronomical.
Stephen Hawking has said,
"The odds against a universe like ours emerging out of something like the
Big Bang are enormous. I think there
are clearly religious implications"
(Hawking 1985, p. 121).
Detractors will say that we
could only observe a universe that is consistent with our existence - and surely
that is a truism. And there is a
possibility that there are other universes.
Perhaps if there were a near infinite number of universes the
probability does increase that somewhere this special set of conditions would
obtain. It is also possible that other
forms of life vastly different from our own have emerged elsewhere under
different initial conditions and physical laws. So far we do not know of any.
For now this must remain an open question.
"If it is the case that
the existence of life requires the laws of physics and the initial conditions
to be fine-tuned to high precision, and that fine-tuning does in fact obtain,
then the suggestion of design seems compelling" (Davies 1994, p. 51). It
is at least not a more extravagant metaphysical claim than the claim for
infinite random universes. In fact some
would argue that the hypothesis that there exists an intelligent designer
serves as a simpler and therefore better explanation (applying the Ockham's
razor criterion).
Contributed by: Dr. Anna Case-Winters
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