First, "The Train Station" by Jean-Michel Bihoel:
http://www.3dvf.com/afficher_image-293-5852-3ea5ad0dcb.html

p, 42, "Cosmology and God" by Dr. Victor Stenger, in Science and Religion.:

"As cosmologist and Quaker George Ellis explaints it: "The symmetries and 
delicate balances we observe require an extraordinary coherence of conditions 
and cooperation of laws and effects, suggesting that in some sense they have 
been purposefully designed" (Ellis, 1993).
...
Then, in the chapter "Interpreting the Coincidences", Stenger mentions the 
corollary i.e. the "anthropic design argument": "How can the universe possibly 
have obtained the unique set of physical constants it has, so exquisitely 
fine-tuned for life as they are, except by purposeful design - design with life 
and perhaps humanity in mind?".
...
Then Stenger brings up that flaws: 1. "it makes  the wholly unwarranted
assumption that only one type of life is possible".

Then, in "The Natural Scenario", he points out that the traditional 
inflationary big bang model has some shortcomings that may be shored up with 
the Multiverse hypothesis. Also called "Many worlds", Stenger says "Another way 
to express this is with lines from T.H. White's The Once and Future King: 
"Everything not forbidden is compulsory".
...
In other words, given a sufficient number of multiple universes, ps anything 
may be possible if not "forbidden". The forbidden part includes conservation 
laws that may cull out impossible and/or completely random and chaotic 
scenarios. But obviously, we can create mental universes that are not 
forbidden, say a universe with tiny Japanese gardens and miniature people 
growing out of Obama's head.
Stenger is talking about physical worlds, which may include higher dimensions 
but still follow self-consist rules, or Natural Laws.  


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