I hope my point with the antimonkey was clear at least to someone.
Lawrence Krauss wrote a book 'demonstrating' how something can come from nothing.
To imagine that the rules of language or mathematics can overrule the world is called 'magical thinking'.
If you conceptualise nothing as a formless entity predicated on the absence of particulars, sure
It's a self-evident truth of reason that every event has a cause.
And again: can something come out of nothing?
All dumb mechanical systems tend to equilibrium:
No dumb mechanical system can be causally effective - there is nothing to initiate motion and even if by some impossibility there was motion, it would lead to equilibrium after a time.
God's environment cannot be fine-tuned for life because there is no-one to do the fine tuning.
So God must not need a fine-tuned environment.
Time cannot have always existed:
1. Assume time has always existed
2. Call the current state of the universe X
3. Then the universe has been in state X a greater than any number of times in the past
4. Absurd, so 1 is wrong - time has a start
And without God, we are left with an unexplainable mystery of the universe being fine-tuned
Something causally effective, IE intelligent, must exist before time.
A simulation of gravity doesn't attract nearby bowling balls. A simulation of the brain would perfectly simulate the behavior of a brain but would not necessarily implement consciousness.
There must be at least one 'brute fact' in reality or else the result is nothing (null universe).
1. Can’t get something from nothing
2. So something must have existed ‘always’.
4. It’s not possible to exist permanently in time (would have no start to existence and you cannot exist if you do not start to exist), so the ‘something’ must be the timeless first cause (of time/causality).
But something beyond time must exist.
God has to be causally effective, that suggests made of some substance that is from beyond spacetime. It is possible that the universe is underpinned by a non-material substrate (see quantum entanglement). Maybe God is made of this substance.
A first cause must be able to cause effects without in itself being effected. So it must be self-driven. IE Intelligent.
Simulating an electric field does not produce an electric field in the non-simulated world, but...
Tell that to Galen Strawson.
I am both a functionalist and a panpsychist
If you remove God, you are left with something completely inexplicable / unexplained, so that is not a more reasonable explanation, it is a less reasonable explanation.
The universe is fine-tuned for life. Saying the universe existed before time means there is no room for a fine tuner so that leaves a billions to one shot that the universe is fine tuned by accident.
There is a God
The uncaused cause must be able to cause an effect without itself being effected. Therefore it must be self-driven. Therefore it must be intelligent. An intelligent creator of the universe fits my personal definition for God.
Panpsychism is exactly the opposite of that: whatever is metaphysically going on in human brains is nothing special, it’s just a normal facet of everything,
Replicate the function and you automatically replicate the experience.
...unless you think there’s some spooky metaphysical thing going on in real human brains that isn’t going on in simulated ones.
OK, then define "meaning" in your terms.
Well I can't agree till I understand what you're saying. Why can't a computer, or an "information processing system," be conscious? We're information processing systems and we're conscious.
If consciousness (feelings, qualia, etc.) are information, then we already know that the substrate doesn't matter.
Why the living?
I don't think sensory-input qualia are necessarily a problem: e.g. knowing redness entails experiencing redness in the way our sensory apparatus presents it.
The REALLY hard problem is feelings (e.g. pain, desire).
It's hard, and we aren't close to figuring it out, but that hardly seems like a good reason to jump to conclusions like panpsychism.
Fossilized dinosaur footprints in mud are not metaphysically weird, but they're a literal impression of an event on the mud.
So to disagree with the panpsychist, you have to either deny that you and I have any first-person experience, or else postulate that something metaphysically strange happens somewhere in the evolutionary chain from rocks to people.