The idea is that certain well-defined systems do "reset," and the universe is such a system (but it takes a really, really,..., really long time. Interesting stuff! — tim wood
Existing requires coming into being. So stuff can’t have existed for ever; it must of been created. — Devans99
How do you know that God is THE God? Maybe all the religions have it completely wrong... — Judaka
(else entropy would be at a maximum by now — Devans99
I would guess he would be timeless though. If he existed in time, he'd have no start, no coming into being so that's impossible. If he did have a start in time, what would come before God? Nothing but an empty stretch of time. Nothing to create God - impossible. So to get around these problems, he has to be outside time. — Devans99
Why would it be maximum by now? — Christoffer
There is nothing to support any of this. An argument for something needs to make the conclusion true, this is just rambling ideas. — Christoffer
Entropy only increases with time. If time was infinite entropy would be at a maximum. — Devans99
It is not; so if time is infinite there must have be 'entropy reset' events. — Devans99
These would be Big Bangs/Big Crunches. — Devans99
But there cannot have been an infinite regress of these in time; then there would be no first Big Bang so the system as a whole would not make sense. IE a creation event. — Devans99
I notice you avid addressing my actual argument and resort to generalities. — Devans99
"Big Crunch" is nothing that has been proved by physics — Christoffer
You have no true premises for this conclusion — Christoffer
I refer to the actual science and physics that do not support anything of what you say. You might need to wait until physics have given you proof that supports your conclusion and premises. — Christoffer
How else would you propose to reset entropy? It requires the contraction of space; IE the big crunch; there is no other way to lower entropy. — Devans99
Well we have half of the evidence — Devans99
It was not a naturally occurring event — Devans99
a non-natural event caused by God. — Devans99
What physics do you base this conclusion on? How do you know that entropy needs to be reset? — Christoffer
How do you know this? What evidence do you have for this? — Christoffer
If time is infinite and entropy increases with time, what else could happen but entropy reach a maximum? But we see a low entropy universe so if time was infinite, entropy reset events must of happened. — Devans99
If time is infinite and the Big Bang is a naturally occurring event; it should have occurred an infinite number of times already; but we have evidence of only one. So we can conclude that the Big Bang was a non-natural event caused by God. — Devans99
How do you know time is infinite? — Christoffer
You do not know that time is infinite. You do not know the nature of Big Bang since physics has not been able to verify everything about the event. We do not have evidence of "only one". — Christoffer
If time is finite then time must have been created by God (so I can rest my case and just address the time is infinite case). — Devans99
You are not listening to the objections of your argument. You have no support to the claim that time is infinite, therefore your argument is not working. Case closed. — Christoffer
I believe time is finite — Devans99
Then you are not doing a philosophical argument, you are just believing without proof and you are just having an opinion, no argument at all. — Christoffer
There is almost complete scientific consensus of the Big Bang, down to a very small fraction of a second before time 0. And that is where the physics ends right now — Rank Amateur
if time was infinite — Devans99
We can still use statistics to find out about what happened — Devans99
or anything else are all a possibility and one has no superior claim than another. — Rank Amateur
[1] If time infinite
[2] And matter/energy creation is a naturally occurring event;
[3] We would of reached infinite matter/energy density by now. — Devans99
[4] So time finite; IE created by God, — Devans99
Ahmed states, "at every time the universe existed and there was no time before the universe existed; there was no time in which God could have acted." — Walter Pound
I would guess he (God) would be timeless though. If he existed in time, he'd have no start, no coming into being so that's impossible. If he did have a start in time, what would come before God? Nothing but an empty stretch of time. Nothing to create God - impossible. So to get around these problems, he has to be outside time. — Devans99
3 only follows from 1 and 2 if the matter that is being created is also infinite. If it "decays" in some way the conclusion isn't necessary. — Echarmion
Why could a finite time only be created by God? — Echarmion
So it really could be turtles all the way down? — tim wood
[3] We would of reached infinite matter/energy density by now.
[4] So time finite; IE created by God, — Devans99
I would have thought matter would decay into energy and energy would not decay at all, but probably best to say (in 2) that energy/matter is created on average. — Devans99
Creation of time is a non-natural event so it requires some sort of timeless intelligence. So some sort of creator. This might not be quite the same as the traditional interpretation of God. — Devans99
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