Not entirely true. You obviously know enough about general shooting to know that the shot you propose is extremely difficult for even veteran shooters to accomplish.
I see. You have no data on my shooting ability, so you're settling for indirect inference.
So, while I may not know anything about your marksmanship to say definitively that you couldn't make the shot, it is not entirely unreasonable to say that it would be one hell of a shot if you did.
So you do understand the concept of recognizing an outcome as unlikely, even if you don't have a data base to prove it empirically.
Well, that's not entirely accurate, is it? We know that there are other shooters in this world. We know what kind of weapons exist, as well as their ballistic characteristics.
And 'we' also know a good deal more about the nature of this universe than you seem to want to acknowledge.
An extensive understanding of the nature of this universe is required to even be able to predict the existence of the universal Higgs field, understand how to detect it, and build the huge, expensive machine to detect it with.
I think they were expecting it to look ludicrously fine tuned, and they apparently weren't surprised. But now there's kind of a 'what now?' look going around. Now that they know for a fact that the thing is tuned to 120 decimal places - exactly what is required to cancel all the other known stuff and have a universe with stars and planets that the likes of us can live on....
Well, what now?
Well, as I see it, the good news is, it's not really fine tuning. It's just telling us anthropic reasoning really works if you use it right - when you know what a something has to be for us to be here, then you know what it's going to be before you see it. Because we're here.
And, why is it so bad that I am asking for a counter example of a universe that's laws are different in order to say that this one is somehow unique, or what ever word you would rather use?
Well, at least you aren't asking for much. Just a little trip to another universe in order to test it's laws to see if they are different.
But I was hoping it wouldn't be necessary to go that far. There is a theory about how the laws of this universe formed as it cooled down after T=0. The Standard Model describes in detail the emergence of gravity, the electromagnetic field, and the nuclear forces. Which leads me to wonder how people can argue so stubbornly, in the face of the most advanced physics we have, that the constants may not be variable. If they are not variable, then how did they get from indeterminate at T=0 to what they are now? That looks like quite a bit of variation to me.
But I forget. We didn't actually see that happen. Nevermind.
Isn't that the impetus for discovery? Forget what we can speculate about other universes, let's go out and try to find the buggers. It may never happen, which is why we can't say, definitively, that we are unique, sepcial, odd, mundane, or a dime for 10 billion. We just don't know, and need to fine out more. All I am advocating is to not call so-called fine tuning a problem when we have little to not evidence that it is fine tuned at all.
You guys worry so much about this fine tuning stuff. Don't sweat the small stuff. It isn't really fine tuning the way a multiverse would go about it. the multiverse version of fine tuning is more like an automatic improbability gun with the trigger stuck in the 'fire' position. The thing just keeps blasting away randomly until whatever can happen, does. Then it looks like fine tuning. But it's really just
us being in one of the ludicrously unlikely places that the multiverse randomly blasted out of nonexistence, because that is where the ludicrously unlikely
us would be.
No 'intelligent design' there. So relax. You don't have to worry about the multiverse condemning you to eternal torture.
It now seems obvious to me that the generic 'we' know more than you
think. I, for one, know better than to advocate going out and finding another universe, seeing as how it would take 'us' centuries to get to the nearest star system in this one.
You're right about one thing. We won't be laying hands on any other universes, that we might measure them for 'oddity'. You'll just have to trust me that they're all quite odd. Which is not at all like being 'unlikely'. In a multiverse, each individual pocket universe is quite odd in and of itself, but not at all unlikely. They just seem very unlikely to be the result of a one-off emergence event.
Theory is as far as we're going to get on that universe-finding trip. So that's as far as I would advocate trying to go.
How do you know they'd even listen or care? Or are you just assuming that they would?
I know because I altered your analogy to suit my purposes after you altered mine to suit yours. In my current version of the evolving analogy game, the aliens will listen. You alter my analogy, I alter yours.