If you think that is out of context... then you should become educated on the subject.
Many of the top physicists and cosmologists are atheists... they admit the fine tunings but make conjectures to explain it away.
(note...even the scientists who are believers understand that are not doing science if they approach the subject with the answer being God did it. They still must ask how did it happen.)
Dawkins spoke of Martin Rees book
... I have referenced it before here on et.
Dawkins has had to confront the issue of the fine tunings in public before and this relatively recent video is where the science is.
Tunings or explain the tunings with a Multiverse.
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"Bernard Carr is an astronomer at Queen Mary University, London. Unlike Martin Rees, he does not enjoy wooden-panelled rooms in his day job, but inhabits an office at the top of a concrete high-rise, the windows of which hang as if on the edge of the universe. He sums up the multiverse predicament: âEveryone has their own reason why theyâre keen on the multiverse. But what it comes down to is that there are these physical constants that canât be explained. It seems clear that there is fine tuning, and you either need a tuner, who chooses the constants so that we arise, or you need a multiverse, and then we have to be in one of the universes where the constants are right for life.â
But which comes first, tuner or tuned? Who or what is leading the dance? Isnât conjuring up a multiverse to explain already outlandish fine-tuning tantamount to leaping out of the physical frying pan and into the metaphysical fire?
Unsurprisingly, the multiverse proposal has provoked ideological opposition. In 2005, the New York Times published an opinion piece by a Roman Catholic cardinal, Christoph Schönborn, in which he called it âan abdication of human intelligence.â That comment led to a slew of letters lambasting the claim that the multiverse is a hypothesis designed to avoid âthe overwhelming evidence for purpose and design found in modern science.â But even if you donât go along with the prince of the church on that, he had another point which does resonate with many physicists, regardless of their belief. The idea that the multiverse solves the fine-tuning of the universe by effectively declaring that everything is possible is in itself not a scientific explanation at all: if you allow yourself to hypothesize any number of worlds, you can account for anything but say very little about how or why."
http://www.philosophypress.co.uk/?p=137
Quote from futurecurrents:
IMO the first video does nothing to bolster your argument.
In the second video he equates the condensation of matter into one point at the start of the big bang with the probability of all the molecules in a box going to one tiny place within that box. Then he says that this has to be fine tuning that caused this initial condition of the big bang..........and then the video ends. We have no idea what he says after this.
As we know, selective editing can suggest anything.
He may, for example, say after this: that yes, the big bang required some cosmic adjustment or "fine tuning" for this to happen. However this fine tuning is merely a natural process much like evolution has fine tuned species to fit a specific niche within an ecosystem. Any other mutation would not survive.
The sudden truncation of the video makes it all but worthless for the intent of your argument.