Daryl wrote:I'll drop down a level here.
Personally I do believe in free will, and don't believe in a master puppiter.
However (always a but), how come Earth is so suited to humans? No corner is unsurviable using techniques we can utilise. As an Australian, I add, how come none of the many deadly species can fly or run fast (or be big enough to shoot)?
tlb wrote:The easy answer is that if Earth were not suitable for humans, then humans would have died out. It actually seems that the deadliest creatures are humans.
Welcome to the anthropic principle.
A couple of things:
1. "How come Earth is so suited to humans" is the wrong way around. The correct way is "How come humans are so suited to Earth", to which the answer is "Evolution".
2. "How come none of the deadly species can fly or run fast" Because you're not their prey, or the intended target of the venom. A predator that preys on humans would look different, act different; it would be more like a bear or big cat or wolf than anything else.
3. "If Earth was not suitable for humans..." ... then humans would not exist in their current form. Homo sapiens exists because, at one point in time, it represented a local maximum in survivability. If that hadn't been the case, something else would have evolved to fill whatever niche we developed in.
4. "No corner of the Earth is unsurvivable". Excuse me?
The vast majority of the Earth is uninhabitable, if not instantly deadly, to humans. We are capable of existing in what seems like a broad range of environments, but only if we have time and tools to prepare - and even then, most of that preparation involves creating conditions more favourable to us.
Human beings require many things that might not be readily available - an N2/O2 atmosphere with partial pressures of component gases in a fairly narrow range, liquid water, a fairly complex ecosystem that can produce proteins that we can eat... we do quite well if those things are available, but die pretty quickly if they are not - and as we can see, just raising average temperatures by a seemingly tiny amount causes rather large changes in habitability.