by jimwalton » Thu May 08, 2014 4:15 pm
Thanks for the reply. I seem to have missed the mark with my writing, miscommunicated, or you misunderstood somehow. Let me try again. The point is not that we can't know anything, but that there is no such thing as "truth" in natural materialism, and here is where the rubber meets the road, including the fine-tuning argument.
Naturalistic evolutionary theory would claim (by necessity) that the universe and all that is in it occurred by unguided (necessarily) random sequences of pure chance. It does not exhibit (and cannot possibly contain, by definition) any teleology. It is completely blind, unforeseen, and unpredictable. There is not and cannot be any purpose, aim, or goal. It evolves, period. This claim, by the way, is not a scientific claim, but a metaphysical one. It's a (theological a-priori) claim that cannot be verified by the scientific method, even though ironically it's a pillar of science. But now we have to play this out.
Logically, it is impossible that both naturalism and evolution are both true. From a pure naturalism stance, there are blind forces at work creating random and emergent sequences. Those sequences are not subject to the categories of "true" or "false," because they are entirely biological and physical: amino acids link up, lightning bolts strike, meteors hit, wind blows. Nothing is true or false, it merely is. Given the progress of millions or billions of years of sequences, it still, by definition, merely is. It's always chemicals, physical forces, heat, cold, electricity, gravity. When a lightning bolt strikes a pond and causes some chemical and/or structural changes, true and false still don't enter the equation. It can't; it's just a sequence—a blind, non-teleological cause and effect. Somewhere along the way cognition evolves: consciousness, memory, perception, what have you. But in a system characterized (by necessity) by natural selection, abstract truth (logic, math, etc.) is never part of the equation. The creatures certainly have knowledge (necessary for survival) and even perception and thought (necessary for survival), but how can natural selection in a blind, non-teleological progression (I'm reticent to even call it a system, because that speaks of purpose). But given the necessarily environment of totally undirected sequences, all knowledge and belief is also totally undirected, and therefore the probability that any of it can be counted on to be reliable is low. Even if the odds are 50-50, my memories, logic, and intuition cannot be counted on. If we've been put together by a totally non-directed sequence, it would make sense that anything I think might also be totally non-directed, and therefore unreliable. That's what I'm saying. If there is no directive mechanism, I have no reason to believe my intuitive assumption that my thoughts are reliable, for truth is no part of pure naturalistic evolution. The quotes that I referenced bore out the concurrence of atheists in agreement with what I'm saying. We have every reason to doubt that human cognitive faculties have the capacity to produce reliable beliefs about anything. They are merely neuro-psychological properties. If I am merely a biological, neuro-psychological entity, how can I evaluate truth in the content of my cognitive faculties? Darwin, Nietzsche, Nagel, Stroud, and Churchland agree that it cannot. Certainly rising in the evolutionary scale eventuates in cognition and mental content, but what would ever make one believe that the content is, in fact, true, when truth is not part of biology sequence? Without a directive entity to create teleology and impute truth, there is no such thing, and therefore the naturalist who accepts evolution is rationally obliged to give up assumptions that their thought processes are reliable.