The reason I am not interested in a first cause is because the universe is not eternal and I am not promoting any particular theology. All I am interested in is the existence of a choice that was responsible for the initial expansion of our particular universe. Once I have that choice, I can assume there was a consciousness underlying it. That consciousness would be outside our universe. Since there may be many universes, this does not have to be a first cause nor be associated with any specific deity.
I think our particular forms of awareness are generated by the brain, but I don't see why our consciousness as a whole is. Nor do I think our consciousness is specific to each of us. My reason for thinking that is because of the existence of psychic phenomena. These should not exist at all, that is, we should not hear any reports of them, if consciousness were totally generated and hence individuated by each of our brains.
I view many worlds as a way to resolve the cognitive dissonance associated with the discovery of uncertainty at the quantum level. That discovery means that the project of materialistic reductionism failed.
If I am right about atheistic metaphysics, that it cannot rely on choices, then there is no way for us to get here at all. Our existence, or the existence of anything for that matter, invalidates it.
I haven't calculated the likelihood that by chance alone the universe could have gone counter to entropy and created more complexity rather than the expected less. I'll leave it up to you to provide the calculations that it is possible. What we know about the age of the earth and the universe is that this had to occur within a finite amount of time.
I don't know what "supernatural" means. From my perspective everything is natural. If something exists or happens, that's the way it is and we have to face the evidence and not try to cover it up because it doesn't fit our metaphysics.
The way I see it, if there are agents outside our universe, friendly or not, who make choices, then atheism is false. Atheism is not agnosticism.
Some atheists (Sam Harris, for example) even claim that we aren't agents, that our ability to make a choice is an illusion. My view of the matter is that the belief in determinism is itself an illusion generated by a need to resolve cognitive dissonance.
I don't think many worlds is an interpretation of anything, but it might be an example of cognitive dissonance. Rather than accepting the evidence from quantum physics, many worlds tries to rework that evidence to generate results that are more in line with its preferred metaphysics. That is how they try to resolve the dissonance.
You might want to consider chapter 13 of Bohm and Hiley's "The Undivided Universe". They present a detailed critique of many worlds. David Bohm had his own interpretation of quantum mechanics and, whether one accepts it or not, his take on other interpretations needs to be considered.
One of the conclusions is the following:
In view of all these unresolved problems we have been led to ask why the many worlds interpretation seems to be so attractive to some physicists.
I think the reason why can be obtained from social psychology which Bohm and Hiley weren't considering.



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