This is quite disingenuous of you, since you are invoking the natural world as evidence of God. If God does not relate to the natural world, then the fine-tuning argument is entirely invalid from the get-go. You cannot have it both ways.
I didn't say that the natural world is unrelated to God. I said that science only deals with the natural world. Presumably, the natural world is a subset of the supernatural. Science only deals with that subset.
This seems to be yet another example of the fallacy of the excluded middle.
As I said, it was a misunderstanding of your comment, but if you meant it as I thought you had there is no excluded middle. If theists must use logical arguments to make belief in a god rational, then not using logical arguments (for example belief based on faith) would make belief in a god irrational.
This is the point I have made on numerous equations. The Drake equation represents an attempt to form a prior probability. There is no prior probability in the Drake equation. The Drake equation isn't based on Bayes' Theorem.
The sentence in bold makes no sense to me. Prior probability doesn't have meaning to me outside of the context of a Bayes analysis.
Even if you were to form an argument for aliens based on Bayes analysis and tried to use the Drake equation to set the prior probability, it wouldn't be any more valid than guessing because any valid conclusion of the Drake equation would require evidence for all of the variables, some of which there is no evidence for.
Only to the extent that one is specifying what one is looking for.
Specifying what one is looking for has nothing to do with prior probability.
Exactly. And the value for God is a measure of degree of belief, and the value for aliens is a measure of those variables whose names were arrived at from a theoretical and hypothetical consideration of the question.
I don't understand that at all. Can you elaborate?
The value for the prior probability of a god is a guess. The value for the probability of an average planet developing intelligent life is a guess.
The names of the variables in an argument for aliens are arrived at from thinking about what evidence would be required to form a conclusion about the existence of aliens, just as the names of the variables for an argument for a god are arrived at from thinking about what evidence would be required to form a conclusion about the existence of a god.
Then you finally agree that the fine-tuning argument is invalid.
The argument itself is valid -- the values for the premise are not necessarily valid because not all are based on evidence. The same is true of the argument for aliens.
So the development of intelligent life on the average planet is entirely a supernatural phenomenon?
No. The fact that there is no evidence upon which to place any particular value on the probability that an average planet will go on to develop intelligent life does not mean it's supernatural. It means that there is no evidence, just as there is no evidence upon which to place a particular value on the prior probability of a god.
-Bri
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