Significant to whom? Significance is a human construct. Humans are significant only to themselves.
*I didn't bring up significance*. I responded to the person who invoked it. Having been invoked...
To look at humans and think that we are significant in comparison to the universe that is as large as it is and has existed for many eons before us and will exist for many after us is simply arrogance.
Part of me totally agrees. The other part of me understands that we are subjective and therefore *do* think of ourselves as significant. In fact, just by *thinking* we demonstrate that we understand our significance.
For our brief moment in time the shuttles are more significant to our lives but many if not most of the pebbles will long out live the shuttles.
*Which would make the shuttles significant*, no?
Let's say a person lives 80 years of blissful life. For *8 minutes* of that life, he/she is tortured severely, absolutely severely. Were those 8 minutes significant? Relatively speaking, absolutely. Essentially speaking? Probably not. But again, I was responding to the invocation of significance, and didn't bring up the idea meself.
If humans were created on many different planets then you would be correct.
Or alternate "intelligent" life forms. It's a base, baseless speculative theory, but I'm content with it for what its worth, and it ain't worth much I guess.
I grew up Mormon and Mormons believe in many worlds so I can understand that point. If you hold such a philosophy then that is fine but Shermer is addressing a classical (typical?) Judeo-Christian concept of creation that holds that there is but one creation. In that sense he is right.
I agree that a classical Judeo-Christian concept wouldn't include non-human or human intelligent life forms created in a way commensurate to ourselves.
? I don't get that at all. It buggers belief. Why? Would you construct a building the size of the solar system to house only your family? Did god construct all of this so we could go "wow"? Is it to simply inspire awe? Hell, 10 billion galaxies would have been more than enough.
I don't know why some people need 87 million dollars, or 29 billion dollars. My parents are house-hunting in Indiana and I don't know why they are looking at houses with 6 bedrooms when it's just them.
If we assume that expansion is a necessary result of the big bang, why not have billions of *things* to fill up that space? Yes, we occupy a relative speck...but like I suggested earlier...could that not make us remarkably significant? And why is that a bad thing?
Is being impressed with creation a bad thing? I don't know if God *wants* us to be impressed with creation. If someone paints a picture, is it bad if many people are impressed by it, when they were merely scratching the artistic itch?
As for "more than enough"...the universe only housing our solar system would have been more than enough. Or how about just us and the sun? Either it's arbitrary...or it's not arbitrary...or, for whatever reasons, there's more than we can comprehend. Theologians say that God's love is greater than we can comprehend. An analogy *could* be drawn. Not that I'm advocating the analogy, just throwing it out there.
Actually no. The word "likely" and "unlikely" have come to mean probably or not probably based on reason, logic, experience/comparison or any combination thereof.
Fair enough, I get your point, but I'd temper it with what God does as being independent of anything that we determine to be probable or likely or reasonable.
When the scientists plotted a trajectory and probability of success of reaching the moon they did not have any direct comparisons.
No, they just had the equations and the measurements and the calculations, derived from our experiences and observations. But projectile motion is all around us, and the Big Bang is as far as we know an absolutely singular event, so much so that we're told that the physics don't actually apply during the initial moments.
-Elliot