| Thanks. I'll wait for your full reply, but very briefly: My position is that the existence/non-existence of regular laws, and the personality/impersonality of the FC, have nothing to do with one another. As I stated earlier, event E would be compatible with the FC's personality/impersonality, and so is the universe we currently observe. I don't believe this is your position (and admit my precis of your views earlier may have been inaccurate). I think your position is that observation of the universe's regularity affects the question of God's personality, hence your insistence that this is an empirical question (which I deny). You said: > ... as a naturalist, I'm saying that given the laws of our universe (whatever they are) and the initial conditions, lions exist and unicorns don't and even God cannot change that. I'll freely agree that the former is from logic and hence necessarily true. But the later is just from empirical observations. And further up the thread : > ...it's all empirical. Yes, tomorrow unicorns could start popping into existence and then we'd have to revise what we think of the universe. But until then (this is crucial, my claims are contingent on observations), apriori natural laws seem to be able to explain everything we see. No personal God needed. And more recently > So this particular event [unicorn popping into existence], if it happened, would actually be in favor of a personal God! and > As a naturalist, my claim is that N is likely because we can explain the world using rules. We don't need a Divine explanation. All these quotes indicate that you think that the empirical observation P (in my prev comment) at least suggests Q (which = N). Or alternatively, that you think that the truth of P undermines the need for M. Again, my position is that P and M vs N have nothing to do with one another. (P and W are different, and we have been using terminology more like P for the past dozen or so comments, hence I discuss P here rather than W.) |
> the empirical observation P (in my prev comment) at least suggests Q (which = N).
> Again, my position is that P and M vs N have nothing to do with one another.
So the question we start with is, why do you think M is correct? You agree that you and the book are asserting Claim1, i.e, W can only be explained by a personal God (= M) with 100% certainty?
One answer you've mentioned is: only M can explain why concepts such as lions exist and unicorns don't.
My counterpoint then is to bring in P and say: P also explains why concepts exists or doesn't exist. Thus, we don't need M to be true and Claim1 is incorrect.
Since P can entirely explain everything we see, the certainty of M is eliminated, thus leading to the possibility of N (= Q). Hence, M or N.
Nitpick: P is part of W. W is everything we see. Causes. Parts. And regularity.