The universe requires no mind.
have I said it does?
No, no it doesn't. We have deduced, using technology and applying the Scientific Method, one possible beginning. It appears to have a bit of evidence floating around and no major holes in the theory, so in absense of a better idea most people run with it. The beginning of the universe is most definitely not explained however.
So you are saying accepting the Big Bang theory is irrational?
Under our current physical laws, sure. But our current physical laws are based around the basic phsyical forces. If you have different physical forces, you have different physical laws, and everything acts differently.
Sure, but still, assuming changing of one constant doesn't change others, which is atleast for some constant possibly true?
We know the universe is just like it is. Why? Well we don't know that one yet, assuming the question even has a meaningful answer.
Hypotetically it could be different, as we cannot answer why it's currently like it is.
It is not rational to assign a value for something to exist when no evidence exists to support it.
So it wasn't rational to believe in atomism? He just figured out world would makes more sense, you can explain more stuff, when all builds up of blocks. You don't need evidence to believe in something, only thing it needs is for it to make sense. You need evidence when you state something is(or is not) true.
You... don't actually know what the scientific method is do you? Allow Wikipedia to enlighten you and stop you sounding like an idiot. (I don't mean this as a personal attack, but that line just sounds idiotic to anyone who knows what the scientific methoid is in the same way that the statement 'i am riding a flying purple elephant' sounds idiotic to anyone with eyes; it is patently bullshit.)
You appear to be making the common mistake of most religious worldviews; that of assigning 'Science' as some sort of powerful god-force or united body, as if 'Science' does something. Which is not only silly, but also a strawman.
Umm, yes I do. Fact I might sound like idiot, cause I might not phrase things exactly the way you(or anyone else) would understand them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_science#Induction"Inductive reasoning maintains that if a situation holds in all observed cases, then the situation holds in all cases." = Science proves, based on empirical evidence, that something acts like causality from scientific laws says it will.
It can be wrong, but when something doesn't act like it's supposed to, you see there's an error and it can be fixed. It gives that same knowledge to everyone, being empirically testable, not depending on their world view. Even to nihilist, ball falling rules scientific rules, even if the nihilist doesn't accept them as knowledge. It doesn't state it is true that the ball will fall like that, it states if gravity is true, ball will fall. Clearly, if the ball just starts floating in the air without any tricks, theory of gravitation needs to be looked into. But then, gravity is most likely broken for everyone...
Science = Science that follows the rules of Philosophy of science. It's not science if you throw person into water and burn him cause she floats. I really just didn't bother typing how "Concensus of science practicers do not produce information that can be viewed as absolute truth..."
Universe is finite; what's outside the Universe? If that's finite, then what's outside that? So on, ad infinitum. Again, life certain.
no-space universe can expand into. And universe being infinite means it's cyclic, there are unlimited dimensions, or something else. If there is just finite universe, eventually law of entropy will make it be one rather cold place for life.
If I test it myself, all I've tested is that in this particular test, life didn't result out of a certain amount of hydrogen (unless you're suggesting I create an entire alternate universe made out of hydrogen).
But since you CAN'T know for sure, it means it's either true or it's not. According to you, it's a binary situation, so both are equally valid, ACCORDING TO YOU.
I've never said both are equally valid, both can be valid, they aren't always. Depends on likelyhood you give to it. But I think it's unlikely hydrogen can form life, because according to chemistry, hydrogen cannot form a stable chain. So unless you come up with 2-(hydrogen)atom lifeform, I remain quite skeptical.
The point was, fact you give higher chance for something, and someone gives higher chance for something else, doesn't mean your opinion is any better. God is, and always will be, outside the field of science, just like pretty many other things in philosophy and theology. Doesn't mean they cannot be debated. Belief just is pretty annoying thing to debate on, cause basis on belief is another belief.
"Consider a belief P. Either P is justified or P is not justified. If P is justified, then another belief Q may be justified by P. If P is not justified, then P cannot be a justifier for any other belief: neither for Q, nor for Q's negation.
For example, suppose someone might believe that there is intelligent life on Mars, and base this belief on a further belief, that there is a feature on the surface of Mars that looks like a face, and that this face could only have been made by intelligent life. So the justifying belief is: that face-like feature on Mars could only have been made by intelligent life. And the justified belief is: there is intelligent life on Mars.
But suppose further that the justifying belief is itself unjustified. It would in no way be one's intellectual right to suppose that this face-like feature on Mars could have only been made by intelligent life; that view would be irresponsible, intellectually-speaking. Such a belief would be unjustified. It has a justifier, but the justifier is itself not justified. In fact, more recent observations have shown that the "helmeted face" does not look the same up close, nor when viewed from the side."
This is what I've been saying to whole time, maybe copypaste helps.
Just that. Your whole belief system is based on truths that you view as justified, which justify other views. You cannot really claim any of those to be justified or true without sounding arrogant prick, so claiming you know something about philosophical and theologial truths is well... I feel, very arrogant and disrespectful. Belief in God can be either Belief only(faith - irrational), or Belief with conscious mental states(feelings, faith - irrational or intellectual intuition - rational). And while not rational, irrational sources are also justification for belief, they are usually kinda independent on philosophical thought of others.