If you believe in free will then you have to believe in souls. Free will comes from something invisible... something supposedly 'supernatural'.Oh here we go![]()
Exactly — there isn’t anything chaotic about it. That’s the point.What's "chaotic" about it?
If mathematics described a different set of laws, would that be "chaotic"?
The only interest I've ever had in "free will" is the noticing of myself deciding to do something after I decided to do itIf you believe in free will then you have to believe in souls. Free will comes from something invisible... something supposedly 'supernatural'.
Okay, so the existence of natural laws (capable of being described and predicted with mathematics understandable by humans) is evidence of your God?In answer to the question, why does the universe obey mathematical laws? Why is it not chaotic?
you wrote:
Exactly — there isn’t anything chaotic about it. That’s the point.
The universe operates according to precise, elegant, discoverable mathematical laws. It doesn’t lurch randomly from one physical state to another, nor does it produce laws that shift arbitrarily. From quantum fields to galactic motion, mathematics describes it all — not approximately, but with uncanny accuracy. This order is what makes science possible in the first place.
So the real question remains: Why should a universe that supposedly emerged from a chaotic, purposeless accident be so immaculately ordered, and so perfectly modeled by an abstract human invention like mathematics?
If mathematics is just a human construct, why does the universe conform to it so rigidly?
If it’s not, then where do these immaterial, universal truths come from — and why do our minds have access to them?
It’s not enough to shrug and say, “Well, that’s just the way it is.” That’s not science — it’s metaphysical laziness dressed up as neutrality.
Why for so many centuries have people believed in free will, the supposedly 'supernatural' & magic?The only interest I've ever had in "free will" is the noticing of myself deciding to do something after I decided to do it
Okay, so the existence of natural laws (capable of being described and predicted with mathematics understandable by humans) is evidence of your God?
Nah
I don't have "blind faith" in "nothingness"“Nah,” you say — and in that one syllable lies the entire modern superstition: the blind faith in nothingness
, masked as intellectual superiority.
You’re confronted with a universe governed not by random flux or quantum lottery tickets, but by consistent, mathematical order. Laws that govern the very fabric of reality — laws that minds made of carbon, calcium, and water are mysteriously able to comprehend. That is not naturalism. That is mysticism in denial.
As the historian of science Stanley Jaki noted, science was stillborn in every culture except the Christian West. Why? Because only within a worldview that assumed an orderly, lawful cosmos — the product of a rational Mind — did science flourish. The modern atheist inherits the fruits of that worldview, kicks the ladder away, and declares: “We can explain it now.” No sir, you can describe it. There is a world of difference.
You ask, “Is the fact that the universe obeys laws evidence of God?” and then smirk “Nah.” That is not reason; it is rebellion in a lab coat. The universe does not owe you intelligibility. Chaos has no duty to be consistent. A random accident has no obligation to write in calculus.
So yes, the elegant harmony of mathematics and physics points to design, to Logos — not because it’s comforting, but because anything else is incoherent. Your flippant dismissal only underscores how allergic modern man has become to actual metaphysical thinking.
You are not a skeptic. You’re a believer — in chance, in materialism, in the sanctity of the meaningless. That is your myth. But it is still a myth.
Exhibit AI don't have "blind faith" in "nothingness"
Every post of yours begins with tripe (and rarely gets any better)
Your low IQ, you never stop showing it offExhibit A![]()
I don't understand your questionWhy for so many centuries have people believed in free will, the supposedly 'supernatural' & magic?
It's only a recent phenomenon that Atheism has become popular in Europe, probably because of the lost war & Hitler's death.I don't understand your question
I would say that a primary driving force for atheism becoming more common is that we (humans) have become less ignorant about the world that surrounds us, stretching right out into the cosmosIt's only a recent phenomenon that Atheism has become popular in Europe, probably because of the lost war & Hitler's death.
Why do you think Atheism was not popular before the second world war?
I would say we have become more ignorant of magic because we think because we know more about physical reality this some how is better than studying magic.I would say that a primary driving force for atheism becoming more common is that we (humans) have become less ignorant about the world that surrounds us, stretching right out into the cosmos
A) It does. Not sure what you're driving at with this one.You’ve packed a lot of dismissive rhetoric into a few lines, but not much substance. Labelling Intelligent Design as “junk” without engaging its actual claims is not an argument — it’s a reflex. At its core, Intelligent Design isn’t a denomination or a doctrine — it’s a label for the commonsense inference that the intricate, ordered complexity we observe in nature is not the result of random, undirected processes, but of purposeful arrangement. That doesn’t require one to be Christian — it only requires one to observe, as William Paley did, that a watch implies a watchmaker.
The idea that "God replaces science" is a category error. God does not replace science any more than an author replaces grammar. One accounts for purpose and origin, the other for process and mechanism. Saying that belief in an intelligent cause undermines science is like saying Newton’s belief in the Designer of gravity negated his Principia Mathematica — absurd on its face.
What’s truly sinister is not the Discovery Institute, but the growing effort to enforce metaphysical naturalism as the only allowable worldview in public discourse. That’s not science — it’s ideology.
And if you’re so confident that the universe is undesigned, then try answering these:
These aren't gaps in knowledge — they’re cracks in the materialist foundation. What Intelligent Design threatens is not science, but scientism — the belief that science alone can answer all meaningful questions. And that belief, ironically, isn’t scientific at all.
- Why does DNA contain vast amounts of digitally encoded, hierarchically organized information — the hallmark of language and engineering?
- How did the first self-replicating, information-bearing molecule arise from non-living matter without guidance?
- Why does nature consistently exhibit mathematical order — equations that govern not just patterns, but the very behavior of energy and matter?
- How do you explain fine-tuning in the physical constants of the universe without invoking wild, untestable multiverse speculations?
He's parroting Stephen Meyer claptrap. I posted a video in your thread about thatA) It does. Not sure what you're driving at with this one.
Abiogenesis isn't known. Tiggy presents known unknowns as "unanswerable" facts therefore his God did it questionsB) We don't really know.
It's stupid to bring mathematics into it but an "unchaotic" universe is evidence of Tiglet's God, why?C) It both does and doesn't. This argument is basically sacred geometry. Also physics.
"Fine-tuning" should be challenged at its root (Tiggy has shown that he can't even attempt to begin to answer a question about that)D) Nobody really knows. Why the universe is ordered at any level at all is a mystery.
I’ll reply properly in a few minutes, however let’s take a moment to admire the absolute phucking state of the two replies above.He's parroting Stephen Meyer claptrap. I posted a video in your thread about that
Abiogenesis isn't known. Tiggy presents known unknowns as "unanswerable" facts therefore his God did it questions
It's stupid to bring mathematics into it but an "unchaotic" universe is evidence of Tiglet's God, why?
"Fine-tuning" should be challenged at its root (Tiggy has shown that he can't even attempt to begin to answer a question about that)
I’ll reply properly in a few minutes, however let’s take a moment to admire the absolute phucking state of the two replies above.![]()
![]()
And the award for the lowest quality contributions to the forum today goes too….James!!Remember, this guy is just too fake to say that he thinks the Earth is flat and only thousands of years old (much to the butthurt of his BFF @Hermit)
How old is the Earth pal?And the award for the lowest quality contributions to the forum today goes too….James!!
![]()
Tiger's issue is that he doesn't understand what nature is, and how it works, because he hasn't spent enough time in it. Which is forgivable because really there's bugger all of it in Ireland.He's parroting Stephen Meyer claptrap. I posted a video in your thread about that
Abiogenesis isn't known. Tiggy presents known unknowns as "unanswerable" facts therefore his God did it questions
It's stupid to bring mathematics into it but an "unchaotic" universe is evidence of Tiglet's God, why?
"Fine-tuning" should be challenged at its root (Tiggy has shown that he can't even attempt to begin to answer a question about that)
Tiger is a Dunning-Kruger retardTiger's issue is that he doesn't understand what nature is, and how it works, because he hasn't spent enough time in it. Which is forgivable because really there's bugger all of it in Ireland.
A) "It does. Not sure what you're driving at with this one."A) It does. Not sure what you're driving at with this one.
B) We don't really know.
C) It both does and doesn't. This argument is basically sacred geometry. Also physics.
D) Nobody really knows. Why the universe is ordered at any level at all is a mystery.
This is possibly your most pathetic attempts at debate Fishy.Tiger's issue is that he doesn't understand what nature is, and how it works, because he hasn't spent enough time in it. Which is forgivable because really there's bugger all of it in Ireland.
So atheism became more common when people started believing the earth was a ball in space, interesting.I would say that a primary driving force for atheism becoming more common is that we (humans) have become less ignorant about the world that surrounds us, stretching right out into the cosmos
I don't implore the Bible, I cited Bible verses to show Tiger that the earth, according to the Bible, is flat and stationary, not because I believe in the Bible. Similarly if you quoted something from the Talmud it wouldn't mean you're a Jew. Christians don't lie and pretend they are not Christian. They constantly proclaim their Christianity, they are proud of it. I don't need to believe in any particular God. I don't hold any beliefs about God, I can only speculate. What I know is that a supernatural entity, let's call it God, created our physical reality because it is logically impossible for physical reality to have popped into existence from nothing.They're all different but the same. Flat-earther @Hermit insists that he isn't a Christian, doesn't believe in any particular God, yet he implores the Bible, says he wants to be buried in the Christian ritual.. They're all dishonest retards
We've known the shape of the Earth for millennia, you abject fucking clownSo atheism became more common when people started believing the earth was a ball in space, interesting.
That's what I meant by "imploring", you argumentative semantic twitI don't implore the Bible, I cited Bible verses
But it's not. Interestingto show Tiger that the earth, according to the Bible, is flat and stationary
, not because I believe in the Bible. Similarly if you quoted something from the Talmud it wouldn't mean you're a Jew. Christians don't lie and pretend they are not Christian. They constantly proclaim their Christianity, they are proud of it. I don't need to believe in any particular God. I don't hold any beliefs about God, I can only speculate. What I know is that a supernatural entity, let's call it God, created our physical reality because it is logically impossible for physical reality to have popped into existence from nothing.
Who's "we"?We've known the shape of the Earth for millennia, you abject fucking clown
Implore: to make an earnest request to (someone) : begThat's what I meant by "imploring", you argumentative semantic twit
James, back on planet earth all you’ve done today is humiliate yourself.Look, I've had almost as much 50 IQ childlike stupidity that I can handle in a single day with @Tiger today
Kindly fuck off
You'll certainly find patterns in nature if you look for them, but these aren't universally coherent to every form of life and matter. You don't know why the universe exhibits order any more than I do, nor anybody else. This seems to a consistent problem with theists. Not just Christians, specifically, I might add. You're all more or less the same, in that you can't seem to grasp the absurd leap between observable natural hegemony and your own various religious credos and adherences. "There is order. Aha! My God did it, and my holy text says how!". It's stupidity, Tiger. The stupidest, laziest, superstitious imbecility ever conceived. A relic of the monkey-brain from a dark age, accidentally left out of its box.A) "It does. Not sure what you're driving at with this one."
That DNA contains hierarchically structured, digitally encoded information is the point. Information is not a property of matter or chemistry alone — it points to semantics, not just syntax. You wouldn't look at a software codebase and say, “It just does that.” You’d ask: where did the code come from? What kind of mind encoded it? DNA functions as a language — complete with syntax, semantics, and rules — and unlike raw chemistry, it encodes functional instructions. That's a hallmark of engineering, not an accident of molecules. Hand-waving it away as “it just does” is sign of being inbred.
B) "We don’t really know."
Thank you for the honesty — but this admission is crucial. Origin-of-life research has failed to produce a remotely plausible unguided pathway from non-living chemicals to self-replicating, information-rich systems. Abiogenesis remains speculative at best. It is precisely because we don’t know — and because blind chemistry has never been observed to produce algorithmically functional information — that this question remains such a profound challenge to materialist frameworks. If science were consistent, this should raise at least epistemic humility, not silence.
C) "It both does and doesn’t. This argument is basically sacred geometry. Also physics."
This reply borders on incoherence. To say it “does and doesn’t” is like saying gravity both exists and doesn’t, depending on the day. The point is not “sacred geometry” — it’s that reality is astonishingly intelligible. Why should that be the case? Why should abstract human mathematics correspond so precisely to the structure and behavior of the physical world? As Einstein asked, “The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible.” Physics uses mathematics — it does not explain why the universe is mathematical to its bones.
D) "Nobody really knows. Why the universe is ordered at any level at all is a mystery."
Again, a confession of ignorance — and a significant one. Fine-tuning isn’t an illusion; it’s an observable feature of the cosmos. Physical constants must fall within razor-thin margins for life — or even stable atoms — to exist. The multiverse is the go-to speculative escape hatch, but by your own standard, you’re not invoking it — so what are you left with? If this fine-tuning is real and unexplainable through chance, then inference to design becomes more reasonable, not less
Conclusion…
So what do we have? A universe embedded with information, ordered by math, tuned for life, and containing biological systems that no lab has ever replicated from non-life — and your response is a mix of “don’t know,” “not sure,” and “it just does.” That’s not skepticism; it’s resignation. These aren’t God-of-the-gaps arguments. They are engineering-based, information-theoretic, and philosophical inquiries about the structure and intelligibility of reality — which science relies on but cannot explain.
Surely a worldview with so much intellectual self-confidence should be able to do better than “we don’t really know.”
Knowledge that doesn't require a made up story from the middle east 2k years ago.You claim modern non-religious people come “armed” with new knowledge — but knowledge of what, and for what?
Closing in..
You’ve packed a lot of dismissive rhetoric into a few lines, but not much substance. Labelling Intelligent Design as “junk” without engaging its actual claims is not an argument — it’s a reflex. At its core, Intelligent Design isn’t a denomination or a doctrine — it’s a label for the commonsense inference that the intricate, ordered complexity we observe in nature is not the result of random, undirected processes, but of purposeful arrangement. That doesn’t require one to be Christian — it only requires one to observe, as William Paley did, that a watch implies a watchmaker.
The idea that "God replaces science" is a category error. God does not replace science any more than an author replaces grammar. One accounts for purpose and origin, the other for process and mechanism. Saying that belief in an intelligent cause undermines science is like saying Newton’s belief in the Designer of gravity negated his Principia Mathematica — absurd on its face.
What’s truly sinister is not the Discovery Institute, but the growing effort to enforce metaphysical naturalism as the only allowable worldview in public discourse. That’s not science — it’s ideology.
And if you’re so confident that the universe is undesigned, then try answering these:
Here is the video I posted previously of P.Dave trainwrecking DI (Discovery Institute) creationist fraud, Stephen C. Meyer -
- Why does DNA contain vast amounts of digitally encoded, hierarchically organized information — the hallmark of language and engineering?
These aren't gaps in knowledge — they’re cracks in the materialist foundation. What Intelligent Design threatens is not science, but scientism — the belief that science alone can answer all meaningful questions. And that belief, ironically, isn’t scientific at all.
- How did the first self-replicating, information-bearing molecule arise from non-living matter without guidance?
- Why does nature consistently exhibit mathematical order — equations that govern not just patterns, but the very behavior of energy and matter?
- How do you explain fine-tuning in the physical constants of the universe without invoking wild, untestable multiverse speculations?
How many times do you need to be told that that chap is a charlatan James?Here is the video I posted previously of P.Dave trainwrecking DI (Discovery Institute) creationist fraud, Stephen C. Meyer -
Post in thread 'Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environment.' https://www.sarsfieldsvirtualpub.co...logy-ecology-and-environment.1213/post-130964
Your reply is less a counter-argument than a reflexive polemic — a kind of rhetorical flailing cloaked in the language of superiority. What’s striking is not your rejection of theism, but the breezy certainty with which you dismiss what you don’t appear to have seriously engaged.You'll certainly find patterns in nature if you look for them, but these aren't universally coherent to every form of life and matter. You don't know why the universe exhibits order any more than I do, nor anybody else. This seems to a consistent problem with theists. Not just Christians, specifically, I might add. You're all more or less the same, in that you can't seem to grasp the absurd leap between observable natural hegemony and your own various religious credos and adherences. "There is order. Aha! My God did it, and my holy text says how!". It's stupidity, Tiger. The stupidest, laziest, superstitious imbecility ever conceived. A relic of the monkey-brain from a dark age, accidentally left out of its box.
It is totally chaotic.In answer to the question, why does the universe obey mathematical laws? Why is it not chaotic?
It’s eye opening just how shambolic the atheist position is in this discussion.It is totally chaotic.