In my opinion, the Chinese system is working very well because the nation is fairly homogeneous, and the leaders are determined to have the nation grow stronger through cooperative effort. Corruption undermines that effort, and they execute such people rather quickly.
*snerk*
And in my opinion, Western nations ignore some basic tenets of Christianity when they initiate wars and stir unrest to further "national interest".
The current USA conservative Christianity that involves itself in politics tends to seem like they don't care about a lot of Jesus' teachings in the NT, whether it be with regards to war, the poor, and more. This is hardly news to just about anyone other than them, though.
Will the Chinese success lead to a better world without Christian morality in the long run? I am not so sure after my experience rooming in the house of a Chinese woman in New Zealand.
Well... it might be worth remembering why there are so many Chinese atheists, regardless. The main reasons aren't especially "nice" ones, after all. It also might be worth remembering the history that religion and China have, in general, in all its horrible splendor. The Christians of the
Taiping Rebellion, for example, may well have caused more death than WW2.
My reading of the various articles on the internet is that there is a scientific consensus that the universe IS fine-tuned for life. Some say it is just so and is unremarkable. Some say it has the appearance of being engineered.
Kinda sorta. As long as the claim is that the universe simply has constants that allow for life, that is safe ground and is what a few too many people have called fine-tuned. Anything past that, though, runs into a nasty problem that is neatly summarized by the phrase "lack of relevant data." We have a sample size of 1 to work with for practically all of the parameters that are presented or, for the more contrived local ones, we have an effective sample size of one planet or one solar system (sorta, the solar system could well have a lot more information to add to the table, we've mostly only dealt with the stuff that we can observe directly from Earth after all, with a couple notable probes added to the mix). That's entirely insufficient to draw pretty much any actual meaningful conclusions about how likely or not it is for the parameter to be that way. If we had a working Theory of Everything, that might be able to give some reasonable insight into at least some of it, but... we don't, so that route is also entirely inconclusive currently.
The question asked is a philosophical one, but is not unscientific. Why are the constants what they are? If a child asks an adult this question and gets the answer "Because it just is", that is not a scientific debate.
When there's insufficient data/understanding available, "because it just is" is a common answer, though.
Scientists accept that we are indeed fine-tuned.
For that to be correct in general, a loose definition of fine-tuned that does not require either intelligence or designer would need to be used. Some scientists, of course, do postulate such a designer, though the reasoning that I've generally seen them put forth has been inherently fallacious.
But they get around this by postulating multiverses in the order of 10 to the power 500. That very large number is needed to get one of our universes.
Multiverse theories tend to be proposed as potential solutions for entirely different problems, if I recall correctly, but can indeed have the convenient side effect of being able to be used like this.
A dolphin can do a back flip and juggle a ball. How does that help it make a fire?
That just begs the question of what motivation would they have to make a fire and how much benefit could aquatic species actually derive from it, regardless of how intelligent they might be? Part of the reason why fire (and clothes) is meaningful to humans is that human bodies are just not good enough at temperature regulation in most of the places where we live now.