If I say that there are millions of possible combination of numbers to select from for your lottery ticket, does that imply that a lottery ticket was created and sold for every possible combination of numbers? That there are more possible outcomes than are actually realized is not a contradiction. It's a basic fact of nature as I understand it.
You're missing my point. The "contradiction" is that on the one hand you are saying "
any of these outcomes is possible" and then whatever outcome actually happens you're saying "OMG, it's a miracle! Out of
all the possible outcomes, it was
this one!!!!"
Either you think they are all possible, or you don't. If they're all possible, why the surprise that one of the many possible outcomes occurred? Where, in other words, is the evidence of "fine tuning"?
Just because something is random doesn't imply that all outcomes are equally likely. If you throw two dice, you're far more likely to get a 7 than a 12. If you throw 20 dice and they all come up 6, would you believe it was due to random chance or would you consider other explanations? If you assume it's not random, that the designer hypothesis is one way to explain the non-randomness of the outcome.
Where did I say anything about "equally likely"? Who here has any evidence about how "likely" this universe is? If the "fine tuning" argument is to mean anything AT ALL, however, it requires that the physical parameters of this universe not be intrinsically necessary. If they are intrinsically necessary then there's no "fine tuning"": there simply is "the way things have to be." So, it's the "fine tuning" argument that requires the assumption that things
could just as easily have been otherwise in order for there to be surprise and amazement that
they happened to turn out this way.
So,
ex hypothesi, the fine tuning argument says "our universe turned out in one of many, many, many possible ways." Great; but presumably it had to turn out in
some way, right? So why should I be excited about the fact that it is
this way.
Here's what you're not seeing about the 20-dice analogy.
Every single possible throw of 20 dice is equally improbable. If I throw 20 dice and get
1,3,6,4,2,6,1,6,5,4,3,2,5,2,3,4,6,1,1,1--that's just as unlikely as 6,6,6, etc. The error that the "fine tuning" people make is that they
start from the assumption that there's something particularly "interesting" about an outcome in which we happen to end up evolving and then ask "what are the odds"??? That's like starting from the requirement that the dice come up 20x6. But what reason do we have for thinking there's anything so "interesting" about an outcome in which we end up to ask about that outcome?
Again, if every single possible universe is "wildly improbable," then what makes the one we've got different from any other one? Where's the evidence of "fine tuning."