Only if you want to specify the movement of each particle. Generally, we don't try to model random or chaotic systems to that detail. I don't think it is analogous to the models we're discussing.
You've lost me here. How is this the same question?
All we're looking at is ways to tie together observations. The lights in the night sky which move together and the lights which move in respect to other lights. The movement of the lights and the falling of an apple. The presence of a symptom and the presence of tainted grain. The presence of tainted grain and the presence of a particular microscopic organism. A dust storm in Africa and a hurricane in Florida. The mass of an electron and beta radiation. If we know the connection, knowing something about one of those things lets you know something about the other.
Apparent fine-tuning is a continuation of this process, a search for the connection between the strength of the association between objects with mass and the strength of the association between charged particles. If we know the value for one, can we know the value for the other?
The models we have for that have fixed parameters that are based on observed values such as the mass of the sun and the earth, their distance from each other, the length of the earth's revolution around it's axis and rotation around the sun. I'm not aware of parameters in those models that have to be arbitrarily set without any explanantion for why they must have the values they need in order for the model to match observations? Are you aware of any such arbitrary parameter settings being required for models of the movements of the stars?
Before we had Newton's gravity and Galileo's and Copernicus' heliocentrism, there were elaborate and detailed explanations for the movement of the lights in the night sky. But other than their movement around the earth, the lights which we now know represent stars and galaxies were unconnected to those we now know represent planets. And falling apples never even entered the equation. So what we had were seemingly unconstrained descriptions of these movements without a way to explain why they followed the patterns they did. Then heliocentrism provided a constraining and unifying explanation. But we could have an accurate description of how the lights moved and how apples fell to earth, and we could recognize that both were relevant to our existence, and that they would behave in an unrecognizable manner if the parameters were changed, without recognizing that there was a straightforward connection between the two. Was it reasonable that all this was considered evidence for a designer?
My desire to be the subject of interest? How did you manage to infer that from what I wrote? I didn't think I was the subject of discussion at all.
Oh come on. People don't want to call it a "designer" because it likes to go around making universes which contain anti-matter. We think this universe is of interest because it contains us, that the designer is interested in us.
Also, I never said such a conjecture was anything that could be drawn from the sciency part of the argument.
Then why is it even part of the fine-tuning discussion if it can't be drawn from the presence of fine-tuning?
It's one possible hypothesis to explain why the best models we currently have require the fine tuning of multiple parameter values, but it's not the only one. That doesn't seem all that controversial a position to me.
Because it isn't a consequence of hypothesizing about fine-tuning. It's a consequence of musing about how to find a sciency-sounding place for God. To bring up the idea of a designer when talking about fine-tuning gives the dishonest impression that it's a hypothesis that could form in the absence of any pre-conceived notions about God.
Also, you and others keep referring to it as an explanation. Yet it isn't an explanation. It doesn't constrain the supposedly fine-tuned constants unless you arbitrarily decide that it would choose to form universes that would be of interest to us. And that merely reflects our own narcissism, not something which can be drawn from our observations.
Linda