Kevin_Lowe
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
No it wasn't, it doesn't lead to an infinite regress, and this is starting to get embarrassing.
I was waiting for some sensible argument to back up this naked denial, but it never arrived.
It seems watertight to me. If seeing one universe means there must be a multiverse, what allows you to stop just there and quit with a multiverse? Why aren't you then bound, having inferred a multiverse, to further infer a multitude of multiverses, and so ad infinitum?
What is more likely, Kevin? That you, Kevin Lowe, know more about cosmology than Stephen Hawking, Andrei Linde, Max Tegmark, Paul Davies (and a bunch of other renowned scientists)... or that you're wrong?
There's a saying that if a million people say a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing. The same applies to "renowned scientists". I'm unconcerned with what anyone merely says. I'm concerned with the reasons they can put forward for saying those things.
So far the arguments for a multiverse seem to me to be entirely flawed.
What is the proper skeptical response when the topic is obscure and you're confronted by numerous experts who contradict you?
People who believe in a historical Jesus love this exact argument. They say "We cannot explain to you a single argument for belief in a historical Jesus that holds up to scrutiny. But a bunch of academics all say that those arguments are good arguments! Who are you going to believe, our cherry-picked academics or your own lying sense of what makes up a rational argument?".
If you can't explain a single sensible reason to believe in multiple universes, and nor can they, and all you have is an appeal to authority, then you have a very poor case.
All I can see are a bunch of unfalsifiable noodlings, not a rational argument. So far there isn't even a good case that there is something in need of explaining, let alone evidence that multiple universes should be the explanation we favour. It's all just God of the Gaps stuff and appeals to ignorance.