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  1. Anthropic Explanations in Cosmology.John Leslie - 1986 - PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1986 (1):87-95.
    Cosmologists often claim that our universe is “fine tuned” for life. A change by 1% in the strong nuclear force would have meant little carbon would exist, and carbon can seem biologically essential. Again, the riches of chemistry and biochemistry depend on the neutron’s being heavier than the proton by no more than 0.1%. The early cosmic expansion rate may have needed fine tuning to one part in l055 to prevent speedy recollapse and speedy disintegration. To prevent excess turbulence the (...)
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  • Anthropic prediction.John Leslie - 1994 - Philosophia 23 (1-4):117-144.
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  • Emergence of the Fused Spacetime from a Continuum Computing Construct of Reality.Heather A. Muir - 2022 - Foundations of Physics 52 (2):1-28.
    Since the emergence of computing as a mode of investigation in the sciences, computational approaches have revolutionised many fields of inquiry. Recently in philosophy, the question has begun rendering bit by bit—could computation be considered a deeper fundamental building block to all of reality? This paper proposes a continuum computing construct, predicated on a set of core computational principles: computability, discretisation, stability and optimisation. The construct is applied to the set of most fundamental physical laws, in the form of non-relativistic (...)
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  • Mackie on Neoplatonism's 'Replacement for God'.John Leslie - 1986 - Religious Studies 22 (3-4):325 - 342.
    David Hume's greatness depends in large part on how his writings hint at beautiful and coherent theories which are recognizably Humean despite their divergences from the untidy originals. Now, perhaps the clearest vision of a contradiction–free Platonic Form of Hume was had by J. L. Mackie; he described it in such masterpieces as The Cement of the Universe, Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong, and The Miracle of Theism. How successful is this last in its attack on theism? I shall discuss (...)
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