Right. Like we don't know the conditions under which your stroke will be prevented.
What are you talking about? We do know the conditions under which strokes will be prevented.
Right. Like the idea that aspirin might prevent a stroke in you is a faith-based belief.
If it's not based on evidence, it's a faith-based belief. If it's based on evidence then it's not a faith-based belief.
The idea that aspirin may prevent strokes is based on evidence, and is therefore not faith-based. If it weren't based on evidence, the American Heart Association probably wouldn't recommend aspirin to prevent strokes.
I guess medicine is like sausage where you live, then - you don't want to know how it's made.
No idea what you're talking about. Are you saying that mainstream medicine
isn't based on evidence where I live?
If nothing less than direct observation counts as 'evidence'.
I've never said that. There are different types of evidence.
And if speculation based on probabilities and minor extrapolation is indistinguishable from speculation based on extremely low probabilities and gross extrapolation.
Again, I never said that they are indistinguishable. However, I don't know which you're considering to be based on high probabilities and minor extrapolation, since that doesn't describe either belief in gods or aliens, both of which are based on unknown probabilities and major extrapolation.
Then I can understand why pretty much everything would be classed by you as a faith-based belief.
Again, that seems to be your own straw man since I never said. I stated that mainstream medicine tends to be evidence-based in the very post to which you're responding, so you should be well-aware that your statement isn't accurate.
What I
did say was that neither belief in aliens or gods is evidence-based.
Regardless of how the argument could be formed, I'm talking about the way the argument is formed by the proponents.
You're talking about the premise, not about how the argument is formed. The argument is formed like any other Bayesian argument.
They start by establishing a relationship between a god/fine-tuner and life such that life is much more likely in the presence of a fine-tuner than in its absence - a 'likelihood ratio'.
Yes, that's assumed in the premise, true enough.
My point is that I hope it would give one pause to discover that the fine-tuning argument, which purportedly supports the idea of a fine-tuner, may come to the same conclusion even if the universe isn't fine-tuned
It would certainly give one pause to discover that the conclusion wouldn't change if the premises were to change. But in this case, there would be no need for one to pause, since that simply isn't the case.
If the universe isn't fine-tuned, the probabilities assigned to P(E|H) and P(E|~H) would be the same, and the conclusion would be that the chances of a god remain 1 in a million. Or, the probabilities assigned might be reversed, and the conclusion would be that the chances of a god are less than 1 in a million.
-Bri