Truestory,
Your logic is not sound in that you are comparing something that is easily empirically provable with something that is based on concept and theory. If someone has not observed a watch being made, this problem is relatively easy to remedy. If someone accepts as a fact that a watch is made by a watchmaker because they were told, at least this is an observed event.
On the other side of the coin, we have the universe. As I said (and you agree) that any process of creation of this universe is not an observed event by humans. Therefore, all ideas on how/whether it was created are based on conjecture. Therefore, 'common' man is free to make up their own mind on how/whether it was formed. The idea that a god has given us the knowledge is based on the assumption that there is a god to give such information. 'Deus in machina' is a difficult pill for me to swallow.
quote:
"Therefore, it could be considered common knowledge that the world was created by God."
Gee, I guess I'm uncommon. A belief, without data-no matter HOW MANY people believe it, does not make it true, but makes it a belief. Voltaire put the cart before the horse, as you seem to do also.
Plain_insane,
Thanks for the reply. Your question is sound, but may well also be answered with the time-frame question. Entropy is a prolonged event, while life is extremely short in a relative sense.
I'm not a pro at this, but let me give it a shot. First, one of the accepted goals of a life-form is to perpetuate self. Lets say that in the primordial soup, molecules were formed and dissolved based random events; the 2nd law would say that these events would tend to remain random and chaotic. Let's say that random events lead to formation of a molecule (e.g. amino acids) that is able to withstand the environment and actually perpetuate itself. This molecule would do so and rapidly and become a dominant force. Further, improvements upon this new stable molecule might also increase the survival of these new forms. If this seems as if it is an unreasonable assumption, there are modern examples of such a thing (prions).
Granted, hypotheses such as the above are also strongly based on conjecture. My only point is that the 'benevolent creator' idea is not the only idea out there and the other hypotheses are not only reasonable, but often have scientific precidence, where the creationist idea does not and cannot.
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Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please.
-Mark Twain