What about non-standard analysis? Mathematics applies to the world, which is why engineering and physics work — Gregory
Logic/language are tools, shaped to conform to our needs in our version of the world as we experience it. That in no way means that the world is itself obligated to conform to either. — tim wood
And, you take the meaning of "cause" for granted and leave it undefined — tim wood
That means, infinity is a concept, whether actual, potential or other. — BrianW
I think we need to look at where infinity comes from. It is simply a product of a kind of human thinking. — Punshhh
Infinite also means non-stop (endless). Even before the addition and division which you mention, the collections must have been constantly progressing in size and, possibly, in as many progressions as is possible e.g. arithmetic, geometric, logarithmic, exponential, etc. — BrianW
What about space? Is space finite? What is there outside of space? Nothing/something. The former is space and the latter requires space. — TheMadFool
If we ever come to an understanding of these issues, it will most likely come through years (decades? centuries? millennia?) of continued scientific research - or whatever scientific research evolves into. — EricH
This notion of causality has no place in physics. — EricH
As far as time goes, it appears - based on our current understanding - that time started with the big bang some 13 odd billion years ago. However, that knowledge is *very* preliminary - and we cannot draw any other conclusions from it. — EricH
I have no idea what you're getting at with the hamsters. — EricH
1. You put the hamster in the cage and observe
2. You take the hamster out of the cage and observe
3. You conclude that there must be a God — Devans99
How do you know that life is not merely an evolved state of matter, inevitable where matter is, and enough time? — tim wood
"Everything in the spacetime follows the law of cause and effect." Really? Does it? — tim wood
"Therefore logically there must be a cause beyond spacetime." A completely unsupported claim. Please support. — tim wood
t either has a back and front, or it doesn't. That is, it is either real or zero — Gregory
Are the parts non-zero? Do they have a front and back? Uh, the front and back are parts! This is the paradox started by Zeno. YOU don't have the solution — Gregory
Subtly switching between moments and causes in mid-run. :meh:
So, "the creation of space time" is supposedly the 1st cause and the 1st moment?
Anyway, let's have the proof instead. — jorndoe
The world is physical, which is made of infinite parts. If it's more like a simulation, than why are you elsewhere arguing for a God? — Gregory
Does the discrete part have parts. If it doesn't, why isn't it zero? — Gregory
Just check the math. In the 1st step the 1st ball is removed but there are more than 1 ball. In the 2nd step the 2nd ball is removed but there are more than 2 balls. Ergo at the nth step then nth ball is removed but there are more than n balls. — TheMadFool
Then you keep thinking of the division. The numbers of parts go on forever. So infinity does exist — Gregory
Do you potentially have a hand, or do you actually have one? How can something have parts only potentially? How can something exist yet not have parts? These are all non-sensical statements. — Gregory
I would think by definition there can not possibly exist anything more inexplicable and unexplained than god itself. Every property of god is maximally fantastic and magical, to say the least, and not to go into how they are paradoxical as self-refuting or contradicting each other. — Zelebg
Discreteness does even mean anything. Does the discrete have parts? If not it's zero and has nothing to do with an object — Gregory
#1 Where I live there are lotteries. In one of them the odds are around 250x10^6 against, yet people win them. You are yourself unlikely. Does that mean you do not exist, or that any reasonable account of you is nonsense? — tim wood
#2, #3 In a book I have referred to before to you, Just Six Numbers, Martin Rees, it's made clear that in a multiverse environment, there's no law that says the the laws in any given universe match those in another. That is, your comments here are incoherent. — tim wood
#4 Really? You do not seem to grasp that the criticism you receive is substantive and not mere invective. Your "views" are unreasoned, unreasonable, unreasoning expressions of belief. But in the dining room of reason, they're merely an offensive snout that just pokes above the level of the table and tries to steal a morsel. — tim wood
Then what's 1st and nth about here? — jorndoe
So, without such a 1st moment, you can't number such moments like that. (y) (though whatever indexical numbering will do, it's what we already do anyway) — jorndoe
A supposed 1st moment, having no defining previous moment, is then undefined? — jorndoe
Timeless? In that case, you break the principle of sufficient reason. (and some other things) — jorndoe
In every your argument I can substitute the word “god” with “universe”, and vice versa. And neither god nor universe as the first axiom explain anything, but god will always be more complicated and thus less reasonable assumption. — Zelebg
With god the question about fine tuning is not answered but exaggerated as we can ask not only why is god fine tuned to create life, but also why is “nothing” fine tuned for god to exist in the first place. — Zelebg
You need to understand that what the mind thinks geometrically of an object actually applies to it. — Gregory
How many parts does a banana ACTUALLY have? Don't say one because I can split it in half. And if I was all-powerful I could split it up infinitely. Objects are both infinite and finite at the same time. Logic proves this — Gregory
Universe is uncaused cause, it existed before time. — Zelebg
And although there are reasons to call the universe intelligent and equate it with god, to take that metaphor to biblical proportions and personificate universe as a stupid, angry, jelaous and psychopathic magical being is unnecessary and far more complicated postulate, bringing in more questions than answers, and is thus childishly unreasonable idea. — Zelebg
Things don't potentially have parts. They actually have parts — Gregory
Nothing is starting itself. You dont get it. Over your head. Bye — Gregory
There is simply the first motion, and time starts. Nothing before. — Gregory
You have to really think about it for awhile with an open mind — Gregory
I say gravity starts time and the first motio — Gregory
Obviously the no boundary hypothesis is too hard to understand for you. — Gregory
It is only within the last 100 years that we have become aware of the immensity of the universe we live in - and there are still vast gaps in our knowledge. — EricH
To think that we can unravel the mystery of time based on the functionality of our advanced monkey brains is a case of hubris — EricH
You can't ignore their space-time positions because it's critical to your argument. Why are there infinite bananas? Because they occupy different spaces? If they occupy the same space there would be only one banana. — TheMadFool
but then there's a difference between each instance of such identicalness by virtue of their inability to occupy the same space at the same time. — TheMadFool
imagine the series of motions as a bunch of pictures. Together they flow to create time, but there is no time before the first motion. Gravity causes the whole series to move and time to flow, but there is no before so a God or anything else outside the series is not needed. The world is uncaused, having its own causality within it, as you say of the dude out there — Gregory
Respectfully suggest that you re-read and absorb what Seditious has to say. Your reasoning is based — EricH
5. such time has no such numbering of moments — jorndoe
Using the human perception of time to argue a Primary Cause outside of time is...it seems, from my perspective, nonsense. — Seditious
Define "must" please. Others, in other posts (notably 180) have made the observation that the Universe is decidedly not "fine-tuned" for life. Anyone with the slightest understanding of what's out there must concur. — tim wood
So add/remove is the change. How? In what way have you changed the infinite set from which something has been removed and the infinite set to which something has been added? — TheMadFool
set theory doesn't allow repetitions of elements — TheMadFool
Well then you're contradicting yourself. Things can change either qualitatively or quantitatively and you say neither has occurred. Then in what way have the sets changed; after all your claim is that when it is changed, it is not changed. — TheMadFool