But when simultaneous “coincidences” multiply, the “random accident” interpretation grows less and less plausible and reaches a point at which it must be abandoned. The fact that humanity pops up in the just-right time window for astronomers to observe the universe and all of its history and in virtually the only possible location within the vastness of the cosmos where these features can be seen (see chapter 5, pp. 79–89) lends credence to the idea that Someone wanted the cosmos to be observed for a particular reason.