Chalnoth said:
While we don't yet know how our region of the universe got its start, we are working towards the answer. And we can be pretty darned near certain that whatever started it off, it almost certainly not was any sort of entity that decided to start it off. Far, far more likely is that it is just a naturalistic process that happens all the time.
Chalnoth said:
And the claim that there was some intentionality involved in starting off our universe is completely ridiculous and has no place whatsoever in science. I could go on and on about precisely why this is, but I feel I've spent far too long on the topic already.
Chalnoth, you have no problem saying you don't know X, Y, Z about the universe, and it's nice to see that because for whatever reasons a lot of professional scientists, or people who just like science, cannot say that very often.
The exception for you (and many other science-loving folks) is when it comes to the whys and wherefores behind the start the universe. In that case, you know with as close to certainty as possible about something that I would argue is the #1 most unknowable thing for humanity.
There's a lot that science cannot explain, and which does not belong in science, as you correctly point out. But what's
truly ridiculous is believing science is the arbiter in such matters, because at that point it's not science, either - it's faith in something that can never be proven, which is the foundation of your criticism.
And, no, this is not an argument for religion, atheism, or anything else outside the realm of science, because everything outside the realm of science runs into the same problem. Feel free to believe whatever you believe, I honestly do not care, nor do I care to argue your beliefs against mine or anyone else's because it's pointless in the grand scheme of things, and, on a much smaller scale, irrelevant to this forum. All I'm saying is that science has its limitations, and I don't understand why it can be so hard to acknowledge that.