This is initially how I was conceptualizing the problem as well, but I think it runs into problems. "Time" doesn't exist outside of our 4D spacetime manifold. When our universe spontaneously exists, it is like a 4D object popping into existence, outside of any external time dimension. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Other things that spontaneously exist wouldn't "start to exist" within the context of the time dimension of our own universe. You need an external frame here, and here it might be useful to conceptualize our universe as only two dimensional, with a third time dimension — Count Timothy von Icarus
Smarter people than me, who actually specialize in this sort of thing still think Johnathan Edwards has a point here — Count Timothy von Icarus
But I don't think this is necessarily relevant since it would seem to relate to the size/mass-energy, what have you, of objects beginning to exist within an already existing space-time. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Of course, it's a non sequitur to go from "there is a first cause" to "this first cause is an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-good, intelligent designer who gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on him should not perish, but have eternal life". — Michael
Any supposed "first cause" might simply be an initial singularity of infinite temperature and density that then expanded. — Michael
The answer is the same: "it just is; there is no prior explanation for why causation is an infinite regress". — Michael
What I take issue with is your claim that this then entails that there is a first cause. That is clearly a contradiction, as it cannot be both that causation is an infinite regress and that there is a first cause. — Michael
You appear to conflate "brute fact" and "first cause". As I mentioned in my first comment, that explanations end isn't that causation starts. — Michael
Take a one inch square. Divide each side into n equal parts. Then there are n^2 sub squares. Assume the probability of a point being in the big square is one, and each sub square probability then is n^-2. — jgill
"One chance out of the infinite" means what? — jgill
Sorry. Language is a lot looser in philosophy (or this forum) than where I worked. — jgill
Now, to be completely honest, I am rethinking this normative theory; because I don’t think it works anymore. I have this darn habit of writing something up, and quickly defeating my own position—back to the drawing board! ): — Bob Ross
The reason I don’t think it works is because I think the contradiction doesn’t actually exist if one disambiguates the language: kind of like how B and C were really easy to conflate in your theory, being an being with the ability to set out absolute ends is different than being an absolute end. — Bob Ross
They're called virtual particles
— Philosophim
A mathematical convenience that cannot be observed through instruments. — jgill
Wrong. And I think you mean an inch cube in 3-space? Or an inch square in my favorite, the complex plane. — jgill
But divide the square in half. Anything could appear in that square at any moment, and not in the other half. Right? Right.
— Philosophim
Wrong. Where do you come up with these flights of fancy? — jgill
Please don't. And don't ask a mathematician to do so. And something would appear very small if it is very small. — jgill
I love it when philosophers dabble in physics and math. Especially quantum physics. :cool: — jgill
If this is the case, and things can start to exist, for no prior reason (they are uncaused), then why don't we see more things starting to exist at different times? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I have no problem with the metaphysics description and the use of words that do not lean on the physical. My concern is that it should not be forgotten that it is all physical at its core.
— Philosophim
That's where you and I agree & disagree. — Gnomon
*2. Experimental test for the mass-energy-information equivalence principle :
A recent conjecture, called the mass-energy-information equivalence principle, proposed that information is equivalent to mass and energy and exists as a separate state of matter.
https://pubs.aip.org/aip/sci/article/2022/9/091111/2849001/A-proposed-experimental-test-for-the-mass-energy — Gnomon
I agree. I've noted several times that it is currently impossible to objectively evaluate someone else's subjective experience. But do note that this problem does not go away even if we remove science.
— Philosophim
Objective or empirical evaluation of subjective experience may be an oxymoron. But Subjective theoretical evaluation of subjective Ideas is what Philosophy*2 is all about. No need to "remove" the reasoning of Science, just the requirement for empirical evidence. — Gnomon
What I'm noting is that if it is, according to itself, it shouldn't be.
What’s really wrong with this, in principle, though? It doesn’t even seem incoherent to me. — Bob Ross
Literally anyone will agree with your definition here of morality, but I want to dive deeper: what are the properties themselves? Not what is morality, but what are the nature of moral properties? — Bob Ross
So how many convergent subjective analysis constitute an objective one then, in your terms? Is that how it works? — Bob Ross
I can get on board with that, but why do you think there are moral judgments that exhibit this kind of objectivity (viz., that there are moral conclusions which are despite our desires or viewpoints)? — Bob Ross
Which leads me to: what states-of-affairs in reality are morally relevant, then? What out there are we able to access that is of moral signification? — Bob Ross
This entails that when you affirm that morality is objective that there are moral judgments which are made true in virtue of reality, and are not made true in virtue of our pyschology—so what is it, then? Platonic forms, naturalistic empirical inquiries, etc.? — Bob Ross
I don’t think there is anything in reality that tells us what we ought to do, so it does not matter how much a rational agent reflects accurately about reality: the normative or morally relevant information comes from within, not without. — Bob Ross
But what I've said here does negate the possition you have take over your last few threads, especially the causal necessity stuff. I'm not surprised that you feel the need to resort to this. — Banno
What I did was to suggest that we cold simplify the issue of what "physicalism" is by sticking to physics. — Banno
A mind is an emergent process of a brain or a soul (take our pic) which is capable of having desires, cognizing, and having a conscious experience or an awareness of its environment; whereas, an end-in-itself is just a shorthand for something capable of deploying absolute ends. — Bob Ross
Ok, which premise then? — Bob Ross
P4: To treat a mind as solely a means towards an end is to contradict their nature — Bob Ross
So you're saying that there is both an infinite regress of causes and that there is a first cause. Do you not see the contradiction? — Michael
For example, I don’t see how morality, if it were ‘objective’, would be ‘at odds with itself’ or that it ‘doesn’t fit’, in principle, if A were true. — Bob Ross
1. What is the nature of moral properties? — Bob Ross
2. What is the nature of objectivity? I am assuming you mean “that which can be rationally agreed upon”. — Bob Ross
I am assuming you mean “that which can be rationally agreed upon”. — Bob Ross
3. What is the nature of an “objective moral judgment” or a “moral fact” to you? — Bob Ross
I will say, to be totally honest, I think your position is a form of moral subjectivism (; You are a comrade in disguise.... — Bob Ross
You're saying that the set of all causes is itself a cause. This is a category error. The set itself doesn't cause anything and so isn't a cause. The term "cause" refers to the members of the set, not the set itself. — Michael
You're saying that id either a) or b) is true then c) is true. This makes no sense. If either a) or b) is true then c) is false. — Michael
c. There comes a time within a causal chain when there is only Y, and nothing prior to Y. This Y is Alpha. (first cause)
You then ask:
"Why would it be that there exists an infinite prior or infinitely looped causality in existence?"
I am suggesting that perhaps there is no answer. — Michael
Again, you erroneously imply that I deny the role of Brain in Mind functions. — Gnomon
What we call "mind" is the immaterial function of a physical brain. — Gnomon
That's the problem with Materialism, it looks for empirical evidence of something that is immaterial. The only evidence of Mental Functions is philosophical inference. — Gnomon
You may not think Darwin was asserting something unbelievable, but most of his contemporaries did, because they were convinced of a different belief system. — Gnomon
And this is not a problem. This is the limit of what we can measure today, and we take what is most reasonable from that analysis.
— Philosophim
I agree. Yet Reasoning is not empirical, but philosophical. A Paradigm Shift is a change of perspective on the evidence. :cool: — Gnomon
PS___ I appreciate your respectful skepticism. It forces me to tighten-up my own reasoning. And to find new ways to describe an emerging new paradigm of Philosophy and Science. — Gnomon
Thus, beginnings, or "first causes", are demonstrably not "logically necessary" in ontology (topology or cosmology) though, of course, they are possible. — 180 Proof
Correct. Which is why when we reach a point in any chain of causality where there is no prior causality for its existence, 'it simply is', that we've reached the first cause from which the rest of the chain or set follows
— Philosophim
I'm not sure you're even reading what I'm writing. — Michael
I think I am beginning to understand what you are trying to go for, which is, if I am not mistaken, that morality itself contains a ‘moral’ judgment that ‘the reason must/should exist’ if it is to have ‘moral’ signification and then you are trying to demonstrate that this contradicts B. Is that sort of right? — Bob Ross
‘B != !B’ is, even when conjoined with ‘B = B’, a tautology that is not equivalent to the law of non-contradiction — Bob Ross
This one is more of a question than a critique: is ‘moral’ signifying anything special here? — Bob Ross
It makes no sense to say that "there is no first cause" is the first cause. — Michael
I'm suggesting that "it simply is" the case that (2) is correct or that "it simply is" the case that (3) is the case.
So, "it simply is" the case that there is no first cause. — Michael
It may simply be a brute fact that there is no first cause. That explanations end somewhere isn't that causation starts somewhere.
— Michael
In other words, it could be that "it simply is" the case that causality is infinite. — Michael
In (4) you say that if (1) is true then A has no cause.
In (5) you ask "why is either (2) or (3) the case?".
Notice that these address different considerations. It is equally appropriate to ask "why is (1) the case?". — Michael
If you prefer to think that your Mind is a material object, what are its tangible properties : entangled neurons? Can you examine an Idea under a magnifying glass? — Gnomon
Of course, I can't prove that's true, any more than scientists can prove that a cosmic Bang created a universe from nothing-nowhere. — Gnomon
Sounds like you do have an issue with philosophical and scientific Postulation*2. In Darwin's day, the explanation for the variety of plants & animals was based on the Genesis myth. Do you think he was out of line to "assert" that there was another way to make sense of biology? — Gnomon
Just as Catholics believe in angels based on infallible scripture, modern physicists definitely believe in Quarks based on infallible math. — Gnomon
Quark masses are fundamental quantities in particle physics, but they cannot be accessed and measured directly in experiments because, with the exception of the top quark, quarks are confined inside composite particles — Gnomon
Any measure you could speak of is a meaning, and all meaning is created and the property of a conscious subject, and/or collectives of conscious subjects. Measures and meanings are not lying around on the ground of an orchard like so many fallen apples. The source is subjective consciousness in its individual form or its collective. Perhaps, I am missing something here in your objection, please enlighten me. — boagie
No contradiction. You conflated B with “B should not exist”. Those are separate propositions. — Bob Ross
As n increases without bound one can look at the entire structure as a mathematical entity that has the value α=limn→∞Fn(z),z∈S — jgill
Then the causation chain exists as a mathematical enterprise but cannot be associated with a particular value. It simply is. (My attempt at philosophy) :cool: — jgill
“Emergence” is a philosophical term for mysterious appearances with "no discernible path". — Gnomon
The mind has three basic functions: thinking, feeling, and wanting. — Gnomon
But philosophers tend to question everything, and to speculate beyond current knowledge. Do you think Science has all the answers that we need to know? — Gnomon
So, my thesis is just carrying-on the tradition of questioning supposedly "settled science" — Gnomon
For example, both quarks & gluons are unobservable hypothetical entities, that are basically definitions without referent. — Gnomon
The hypothetical in the top quote is just using ‘must’ in a non-normative ‘moral’ sense to indicate that if there is a reason, then there is a reason — Bob Ross
whereas the assertion in the second to top quote is that there simply must/should be a reason, not that if it were to exist, then it would exist. — Bob Ross
It was identity in your point 2:
2. There must be a reason that everything should not exist — Bob Ross
When reformulated, this just tautological:
2. For there to be a reason that everything should not exist, some reason should [has to] exist [such that everything should not exist]. — Bob Ross
If you are conveying, instead, that “if everything should not exist, then there must be a reason” then that is not taulogical, but that is not equivalent to point 2 (you made). — Bob Ross
So if the truth of its own premise is that it shouldn't exist, but it must exist if it is to claim that it shouldn't exist, we're left with a contradiction
This is still incorrect: the claim is that if there is a reason that everything should not exist, then there is a reason that everything should not exist. — Bob Ross
“There must <...>” is the same statement as “There should <...>”: same issue. — Bob Ross
9. Because A cannot assert the truth of its own premise, or contradicts itself, it cannot exist. Therefore 2 is contradicted, and there cannot be a reason for why everything should not exist. — Bob Ross
The truth of its own premise is that it shouldn’t exist, not that it should and should not exist. — Bob Ross
hat it is exceedingly vague. As pointed out by me above, and by the SEP article, at issue the question of what constitutes the physical. — Wayfarer
This is 'Hempel's dilemma': if physicalism is defined by reference to contemporary physics, then it is false — after all, who thinks that contemporary physics is complete? — Wayfarer
In effect, and this is the way you use it, 'physical' amounts to a general deference to science as an arbiter of reality — Wayfarer
To you, this is obvious, as you frequently say, never mind that a great deal of philosophy comprises questioning what is generally thought to be obvious. — Wayfarer
One can interpret circular causality as saying that there is no initial cause, or as saying that what is considered "initial" is subjective or relative to the observer. — sime
The important thing, is that causal circularity implies that every causal relation is symmetric and of the form A <--> B. or equivalently, that the causal order A --> B --> C comes equipped with a dual order in the opposite direction, C --> B --> A. — sime
Also, a presentist might interpret the present as being the perpetual "first" cause , in spite of also admitting that present events are caused by "past" events when speaking in the vulgar. — sime
↪Philosophim I was indoctrinated in materialism for almost all my life. It's only recently that I've discovered it's incoherent. Materialism claims that we could be in a simulation. That would entail that all our feelings and imaginings and dreams and the essence of who we are are a collection of electronic switches. Doesn't that strike you as completely absurd? That the joy of playing with your children can emerge if you take some switches, run some current through them, and turn them on and off in a certain way? Why on Earth should I believe such nonsense? — RogueAI
Picture Holmes in your mind right now. — RogueAI
Fictional characters and mathematical theorems and numbers are mental objects. — RogueAI
Let's say you describe all that rage and red-light running in purely physical terms and then showed it to an alien who didn't know if humans were p-zombies or not. Could the alien figure out, from that purely physical description of my rage-induced red-light running behavior, that I am not a p-zombie? — RogueAI
Sherlock Holmes? The Pythagorean Theorem? — RogueAI