No physicist I have ever listened to thinks there is any actual evidence for fine-tuning.
What do you mean “listened to”? Do you just plug your ears at conferences and symposia? Do you get someone else to read through e.g.,
APS journals in order to make sure you skip papers devoted to solutions and/or implications of known fine-tuning problems (or new fine-tuning problems)?
More likely (given what you’ve written) you are listening to a small number of physicists in a highly selective manner and misunderstanding some of the fundamentals. For example, guys like Susskind, Carroll, Weinberg, Greene, Tegmark, etc., who are popular or at least have written popular books I’ve been asked about or told about sometimes deny that there exists a fine-tuning problem or that the universe is fine-tuned not because they deny that there is evidence for fine-tuning but rather because they believe that they have an approach to it which solves the problem(s) and is satisfactory or even the correct one! But by this definition, theologians like WL Craig don’t believe in fine-tuning problems because they have a solution: God did it.
A central difference is that physicists and cosmologists are also interested in often related problems other than fine-tuning and our evidence for different types of fine-tuning. We are concerned, for example, with naturalness and the hierarchy problem(s), as well as a certain amount of aesthetics and metaphysical issues.
Carroll has written in a widely-used textbook on the fact that the universe appears fine-tuned and has more recently written a rather simple, chapter-length document on his personal take on where the issues of fine-tuning lie. Susskind has said and written numerous times of his belief that the universe clearly appears finely-tuned, as has Weinberg: "Indeed anthropically inclined physicists like Susskind and Weinberg are attracted to the multiverse precisely because it seems to dispense with God as the explanation of cosmic design" (from Carr’s editors introduction to
Universe or Multiverse?, cited in a previous post). Other physicists, especially those who you’d only know from journal articles or papers on arXiv someone sent you a link to or from this or that conference, likewise deny that there is any
actual fine-tuning because the evidence can be explained according to some method or approach they advocate (many of these approaches are in direct conflict).
You can find all sorts of papers written over the years in many different journals which do in fact argue that there exists no fine-tuning problem, but not because there is no
evidence. Rather, the claims made in these research journals are that X or Y method, approach, etc.,
solves this or that fine-tuning problem (or class of fine-tuning problems).
The same authors:
Finely tuned models sacrifice explanatory depth
http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/18526/7/FTED_20.pdf
You either didn’t read the article, or have completely failed to understand the issues involved. The authors are not arguing that there is no evidence for fine-tuning. They aren’t even claiming to have solved any fine-tuning problems. Rather, they are noting
that it is a problem, and specifically that such fine-tunings demand explanations. This is, incidentally, absolutely in agreement with naïve fine-tuning arguments made by theologians. The difference is that, as elsewhere in the physics literature, the argument(s) made concern the nature of the problems of fine-tunings in physics (at a rather unusually broad level), as opposed to an immediate leap to “therefore god” or “therefore multiverse”.
This is what the model predicts?
Absolutely wrong:
“In order to avoid additional fine-tuned constants of Nature, it is reasonable to assume that the Big Bang started from a totally neutral state where the sum of all additive charge-like quantum numbers was zero, hence from equal amounts of matter and antimatter. A matter–antimatter symmetric universe would, however, have rapidly annihilated to an empty light bubble, while we live today in a matter-dominated Universe. Related to the density of relic photons, the number of matter particles amounts only to about one in several billions. The matter content of our Universe hence originates from a tiny but decisive disbalance characterized by a small number. In a closed universe, a significantly larger matter density (more than one matter particle per one million relic photons) would have caused a rapid recollapse of the Universe without any chance for structure formation and life.”
Naumann, T. (2017). Do we live in the best of all possible worlds? The fine-tuning of the constants of nature.
Universe,
3(3), 60.
The model doesn’t predict asymmetry or symmetry, but rather more general principles combined with a lack of any theoretical justification for asymmetry leave the matter-antimatter asymmetry as a problem. It is an outstanding problem in so-called Beyond Standard Model (BSM) physics.
That is ridiculous. Mathematics has predicted actual physical things.
No, we use mathematics to predict. Incidentally, one of the most important mathematical structures and tools used in modern physics was developed using theological assumptions (namely, that a most perfect deity would organize the laws of the physical universe to reflect these extremes, which led Maupertuis and then Euler and Lagrange to formulate the variational calculus and action principles which underlie essentially the entire structure of modern fundamental physics and beyond). Newton’s laws as well as that of Galileo were likewise theologically motivated, and so was their view of mathematics and its relation to the physical and metaphysical world.
My point is not that mathematics isn’t a fundamental tool, or that God provides a useful tool or principle or anything like these in the past ~300 years. Rather, it was that simply because mathematics has been successful doesn’t justify the leap from “some mathematical structures are successfully used across physics and other sciences” to “we can infer from these successes something even remotely resembling scientific evidence for other universes.” Other universe aren’t justified by the mathematics in any case. They are posited to explain away the appearance of something like design or fine-tunings. The real issue for the extreme extrapolations based on mathematical structures is that we know such systems are inherently limited and have no way to constrain the possible sets of universes to allow such that for example we can exclude from the multiverse infinitely many gods like Zeus or universes in which Hogwarts and Vampires exist. The mathematical universe hypothesis is limited only by the structures we can dream up, and these aren’t even limited to those that can be rigorously defined.