JThunder:
No, he goes quite a bit beyond that. The anthropic principle , by itself, merely states that life-permitting conditions must exist in any universe where living observers exist. It doesn’t explain WHY those conditions exist in the first place.
It doesn’t have to explain why, that’s the entire point. However, Dawkins thinks it’s less satisfying than an explanation why fine-tuning exists. He’s saying to wait for a better answer because it’s more satisfying, not because it’s needed.
Oh dear. Shall I spell it out for you, then? http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/about_king/encyclopedia/India_trip.html
http://www.america.gov/st/washfile-english/2006/January/20060109162734jmnamdeirf0.3977777.html
A student of the philosophy and principles of nonviolence enunciated by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869–1948), King in 1959 traveled to India, where he studied further the legacy of the man his widow, Coretta Scott King, later would call his “political mentor.”
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In 1959, as the civil rights movement was gaining ground, King went to India to study Gandhi’s legacy firsthand. He marveled at the religious diversity of the subcontinent, how Gandhi had brought people of all faiths and classes together to work nonviolently for freedom.