Good question. He would at the very least have to change from not yet having created the universe to having created the universe, which implies that he is a god who changes; and since change requires time, a god who changes is not a timeless god. I infer that the notion of a timeless creator god is incoherent. However, a god who changes within his own time but sees all of our time at once is not incoherent. Having said which, I personally see no evidence for any kind of god.But what exactly is a timeless god, how could he do anything? — Devans99
Good question. He would at the very least have to change from not yet having created the universe to having created the universe, which implies that he is a god who changes; and since change requires time, a god who changes is not a timeless god. I infer that the notion of a timeless creator god is incoherent. However, a god who changes within his own time but sees all of our time at once is not incoherent. Having said which, I personally see no evidence for any kind of god. — Herg
If time is defined in relation to physical change — Metaphysician Undercover
Your phrase 'something other than "time"' is empty of meaning, unless you can suggest some of the properties of this supposed 'something'.If time is defined in relation to physical change, then it is necessary for physical change to be occurring in order for time to be passing, hence a universe is required for time, and it makes no sense to talk about anything "before" the universe. If God creates this universe, God is outside of time, and timeless. This is not incoherent, it just requires referring to something other than "time" to account for God's actions, God being non-physical and time being constrained to physical existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
Better.But if time is defined in some other way, such that time can be passing without any physical change occurring, then there is no need for a physical universe for there to be time, and talk of a time before the universe would be coherent. This allows that God's actions occur in time, therefore God is not timeless in this conception, but God's actions are at a time when there is no physical existence — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think this is correct. If it were, the proposition "something came from nothing" should contain a logical error: but if so, what is the error?There should logically be nothing. — Devans99
This is a statement about you, not about the universe (or indeed about god). Why should reality be constrained by the limits of your (or anyone's) imagination?Somehow I cannot imagine the universe in all its magnificence always existing without any involvement from god. — Devans99
Why can't the fact that there is something rather than nothing simply be a brute fact? — Herg
A deity no doubt had the motive, and may arguably have had the opportunity, but what was the means? — Herg
Your phrase 'something other than "time"' is empty of meaning, unless you can suggest some of the properties of this supposed 'something'. — Herg
In fact I did not use the word "physical" in my post, and I see no reason to define time in terms of the physical, unless we can say for sure that there is no non-physical form of existence, which I don't believe we can. Even the physicist John Wheeler didn't define time in terms of the physical; he defined it as "what prevents everything from happening at once", which I think is a very good definition. — Herg
I don't think Occam's razor applies here, because it only applies where you are seeking an explanation for how things are, and that is not the case here.Why can't the fact that there is something rather than nothing simply be a brute fact?
— Herg
Because 'Something' is so non-Occam's razor; the simplest model is 'Nothing' and with that model, nothing requires explanation. — Devans99
This sounds tongue in cheek, but in case it isn't, I will point out that the stars and planets weren't available for God to use as a means when initiating the Big Bang.A deity no doubt had the motive, and may arguably have had the opportunity, but what was the means?
— Herg
I am a fan of the explanation that the universe is merely a giant game of Conway's Game of Life which God initiated through the big bang. The stars provide the energy for life and the planets provide the living surfaces. — Devans99
The problem is that if all you can say about X is that it is not Y, you are attributing only a negative property to X, and nothing real can have only negative properties.Your phrase 'something other than "time"' is empty of meaning, unless you can suggest some of the properties of this supposed 'something'.
— Herg
I do not agree with this. To say "X is something other than Y" is not to say something devoid of meaning, as it distinguishes X from Y. I agree that it says very little about what X is, but it may be considered as a start, and therefore not devoid of meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
More to the point, what was the raw material God used to make the Big Bang, how could an immaterial being manipulate the raw material, and where did the material come from in the first place? — Herg
The problem is that if all you can say about X is that it is not Y, you are attributing only a negative property to X, and nothing real can have only negative properties. — Herg
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